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Medieval Trade Networks | The History of Europe and Africa 

The Great Courses
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In medieval times, trade networks transformed society and culture forever in Europe and Africa. Commercial towns sprang up and serfdom took a backstage to townships. "Settle" in with this look at urban life in the Middle Ages.
This video is lecture 10 from the series The Middle Ages around the World, presented by Joyce Salisbury
Stream the full series now on Wondrium! www.Wondrium.com/RU-vid
00:00 How Were Medieval Cities Organized?
04:21 Communes Developed to Govern Towns
07:52 Why Jews Entered Banking in Medieval Times
10:50 Long-Distance Trading Fuels Medieval Life
15:24 Medieval Fairs Bring Exotic Goods and Entertainment
17:14 Rise of Islam in Medieval Africa
19:55 Agriculture Supports Medieval Population Growth
22:48 Why Timbuktu Rose to Prominence
25:30 Wealth and Diversity on the Swahili Coast
28:15 Factors Fostering Growth in High Middle Ages
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#MiddleAges #urbanization #CommercialTowns

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26 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 15   
@ML-rz2hb
@ML-rz2hb Год назад
Excellent. She has a gift for narrative.
@SomasAcademy
@SomasAcademy Год назад
~19:35 The fact that they just highlighted the modern country of Mali as the "Mali Empire" causes me pain. The Mali Empire had very different borders to modern Mali; it didn't stretch as far north as modern Mali, but stretched further east into what is now Burkina Faso, and west into what is now Senegal, along with including parts of a variety of other neighboring countries. What they did is a bit like if they'd shown a picture of modern France and labelled it "Frankish Empire" - there's some overlap, but the specific borders are way off. ~23:29 The Sankore Mosque is not the oldest Mosque south of the Sahara, unless you mean directly south of the Sahara; the oldest Mosques in Sub-Saharan Africa more generally (and the oldest in Africa as a whole, in fact) are in the Horn of Africa, which boasts several early-7th century Mosques. The Sankore Mosque also dates back further than the 14th century; it became a popular Madrassa at that time, but the Mosque was first built in the 10th century.
@michaeladu6120
@michaeladu6120 Год назад
I cringed when that map showed up.
@puneetshakya3001
@puneetshakya3001 Год назад
I like how the narration part is done its fabulous but it lacks the animation and visual elements like other documentaries. I hope this message will be considered.
@tomingrassiaimages8776
@tomingrassiaimages8776 Год назад
I listened at 2x. Good video.
@Buda_ma
@Buda_ma Год назад
why there is no attention on this wonderful channel !?
@rajeshthesamwise9802
@rajeshthesamwise9802 Год назад
Really great...
@kille7543
@kille7543 Год назад
WOW! This was really good. Thank you very much. ❤
@joseph8298
@joseph8298 6 месяцев назад
Business partners don’t just go away
@janetoss
@janetoss Год назад
17
@dreamdiction
@dreamdiction Год назад
You can always rely on teachers to teach the opposite of the truth.
@GrandPrixDecals
@GrandPrixDecals Год назад
An American talking nonsense about Europe, history certainly likes to repeat itself! 90% pure reinvention.
@TheLeonhamm
@TheLeonhamm Год назад
A little unfair. The teacher is - presumably - addressing younger students (in US America) with no means of experiencing the still-lived history (even after two massively destructive world wars) in Europe. Even today's Europeans have little concept of just how old their way of living is, and was shaped, from before the 'Fall' i.e. decay of the once ubiquitous Roman government, itself replace not with uncivilised barbarian hordes but mostly Germanic Christians, with their own rather developed systems of government (some of which mirrored or was influenced by, imperial Rome). Britain, where most US Americans fixed their gaze, was slightly different even to the nearest mainland pagan (agriculturalist) warrior bands, e.g the Franks (yes, the French). Britain's Romanised upper crust had eventually - but only eventually - fled the Anglo-Saxon rule c 450's (forty years after the imperial Roman administration had been evicted), in what became England; this was not quite the same story everywhere, and it was not at all the reality experienced in Gaul (modern France) .. where Romanness remained in cities and countryside alike (if no longer under Roman command). A relatively wide area of Western Europe looks and even works as it does today, for better or worse, because of the Germanic accommodation of Roman civic administration; add in Frankish and Italian (Arabic and Byzantine) influences, also the needs met only by growth in their own technological and commercial developments, and their you come face to face with the mish-mash conglomeration of: Europe .. quite unlike most of Northern or some of Central America. ;o)
@jzjzjzj
@jzjzjzj Год назад
wow
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