
The Mongol Empire The First Global Age
Trade Ideas and Plague in the Age of Genghis Khan
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Lucid Historian

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
A caravan leaves the grasslands at dawn and months later a Venetian ledger records its cargo sold for silver. Between those moments lies a revolutionary system built by horsemen of the steppe. Relay posts, passports, merchant partnerships, and guarded ports stitched Asia, the Middle East, and Europe into a single communicative world. This sweeping history reveals how speed and security created the first connected age, moving ideas and faiths alongside silk and silver, and carrying a microscopic killer that would become the Black Death.
Drawing on Persian, Arabic, Chinese, and Latin chronicles, on travel narratives from envoys and monks, on archaeology, climate science, and ancient DNA, the narrative follows roads of felt and stone from Karakorum to Quanzhou, Tabriz, Sarai, and the Black Sea. You will see how a postal relay turned distance into routine, how stamped badges guaranteed safe conduct, how state backed consortia financed high risk caravans, how paper money and tax reforms oiled commerce, and how cosmopolitan ports linked hoof beats to ocean swells.
This is not just a story of armies. It is the story of infrastructure and institutions that remade everyday life. Markets quickened. Scholars, artisans, and clerics crossed languages and frontiers. Cities became switchyards where cultures met. Then a pathogen rode the same routes and changed everything.
Vivid storytelling meets cutting edge research to explain how the medieval world first became truly global. For readers who love ambitious narrative history with fresh insight, this book offers a new map of the past and a new lens on the present.
Open these pages and ride the first global highway.