In this video Heimler explains the environmental consequences of trade in the period 1200-1450. When merchants travelled the Silk Roads, the Indian Ocean Routes, or the Trans-Saharan routes, arguably the most important items they carried were cultural and environmental.
Merchants carried champ rice from the Champa Kingdom into China and changed the course of history for the Chinese. Indonesian merchants carried bananas into Africa and sparked large scale migrations of the Bantu people.
But merchants also carried disease: most notably, the Black Death. As it spread along trade routes, the Black Death (bubonic plague) eliminated huge swaths of the world’s population, especially in Europe.
This video corresponds with Unit 2 Topic 6 of the AP World History: Modern curriculum.
Content
0.089 -> Hi and welcome back to Heimler’s History.
1.43 -> In the last video we talked about the cultural
consequences of the connectivity provided
6 -> to cultures through trade.
8.22 -> This video is going to explore the environmental
consequences of connectivity.
11.519 -> And if that sounds boring, don’t worry,
by the end we’ll have talked about bananas
17.119 -> and worldwide death.
19.88 -> Let’s get to it.
22.08 -> We need to talk about two major categories
of things that spread through networks of
25.64 -> exchange: agriculture and disease.
27.83 -> So let’s start with agriculture.
29 -> As merchants travelled from place to place
they introduced crops into lands which had
33.19 -> never seen them before and that had big consequences.
35.989 -> One of the most significant of these crops
is one I’ve mentioned several times in other
39.86 -> videos, namely, champa rice.
40.96 -> It was introduced to China by merchants who
travelled from the Champa Kingdom in Vietnam.
45.59 -> This strain of rice was drought resistant
and could be harvested several times a year.
49.94 -> This, of course, led to massive population
growth in China, but the environmental impact
54.16 -> of champa rice was significant too.
56.14 -> The introduction of this crop led to the transformation
of the land, namely, terrace farming.
61.46 -> This was a method of farming that made previously
unfarmable land farmable by cutting steps
66.17 -> into hillsides so that you could plant rice.
68.63 -> And again, the more food that was introduced
into China the more the population grew.
72.7 -> Another significant crop introduced by merchants
was bananas.
75.819 -> This time it was Indonesian merchants bringing
this foreign crop into subSaharan Africa.
79.229 -> And this was huge because when the Bantu-speaking
natives of Africa learned to plant this crop
84.56 -> it changed the course of their entire lives.
86.929 -> Their main food staple was yams, and that
means they lived in the places they could
91.619 -> grow yams.
92.619 -> But with the introduction of the banana, they
could move to regions where yams couldn’t
96.49 -> grow, and spoiler alert: they did.
98.549 -> So because this Indonesian fruit was introduced
into Africa, whole populations migrated.
103.439 -> And this same kind of thing happened elsewhere
too and in general when new crops were introduced,
108.729 -> population increased.
110.109 -> But when population increases, that puts more
pressure on the land, and as you can imagine,
116.289 -> consequences will follow.
117.289 -> For example, overgrazing in Great Zimbabwe
led to such severe environmental degradation
121.109 -> that the whole city was abandoned in the late
1400s.
124.639 -> In Europe the land was changed through deforestation
which eventually led to a profound erosion
129.16 -> of the soil.
130.16 -> Combine that with the Little Ice Age that
began in the 1300s, and you’ve got a severely
134.16 -> contracted agricultural production.
136.11 -> Okay, those were some of the environmental
effects of trade with regards to agriculture,
140.08 -> let’s look now at the spread of disease.
141.73 -> Lots of diseases spread through merchants
arriving on new shores, but surely the most
145.459 -> significant of them was the Black Death or
the bubonic plague.
149.56 -> Now we understand today how this disease was
spread: namely through fleas.
154.18 -> So fleas would bite a carrier infected with
bubonic bacteria.
158.099 -> Then the bacteria multiplies in the flea’s
guts and eventually there would be so much
161.33 -> bacteria that it clogged the fly’s guts.
163.239 -> So then they would bite a human and regurgitate
the bacteria into the bite.
168.379 -> And to me that’s just insulting because
not only are you getting the Black Death in
171.58 -> your blood stream which will kill you in a
couple days, but you’re also getting honked
175.81 -> on by a flea.
176.81 -> Now thanks to our friends the Mongols and
their unrelenting lust for more land, as they
180.54 -> pushed further and further into new territories,
they unknowingly brought these fleas with
185.09 -> them.
186.09 -> But the Mongols can’t bear ALL the weight
of responsibility here, the spread of this
188.859 -> disease also came along trade routes, especially
ships that provided homes to infected rats.
194.44 -> But not only that, as merchants travelled
over land they stopped to rest in what were
198.28 -> called caravanserai.
199.93 -> These were little places that dotted the length
of the Silk Roads where merchants could rest
203.72 -> and sleep.
204.72 -> However, they did so in close proximity to
animals and animals have fleas.
209.17 -> So all that to say, the Black Death was a
major consequence of connectivity during this
213.749 -> period.
214.749 -> And when it showed up in a town, the consequences
were devastating.
217.03 -> Probably the most famous account of the effects
of the Black Death come to us from a European
220.241 -> by the named of Giovani Boccaccio in his book
called The Decameron.
224.049 -> Here’s a little taste:
225.2 -> "The symptoms were not the same as in the
East, where a gush of blood from the nose
229.17 -> was the plain sign of inevitable death; but
it began both in men and women with certain
234.159 -> swellings in the groin or under the armpit.
236.64 -> They grew to the size of a small apple or
an egg, more or less, and were vulgarly called
241.56 -> tumours.
242.56 -> In a short space of time these tumours spread
from the two parts named all over the body.
246.659 -> Soon after this the symptoms changed and black
or purple spots appeared on the arms or thighs
251.84 -> or any other part of the body, sometimes a
few large ones, sometimes many little ones.
256.44 -> These spots were a certain sign of death,
just as the original tumour had been and still
261.28 -> remained.
262.28 -> And maybe Boccaccio’s best summary of the
effects of the disease is this: The victims
266.88 -> ate lunch with their friends and dinner with
their ancestors.
270.41 -> Yeesh.
271.41 -> Anyway, this dreadful disease found its way
into many societies of Afro-Eurasia, primarily
275.169 -> by means of trade.
276.93 -> And after all was said and done, it killed
huge numbers of people.
281.02 -> In fact, in Europe most estimates are somewhere
in the neighborhood of half of the population.
286.42 -> Now as you can imagine, this situation had
significant consequences.
290.11 -> Maybe one of the biggest was economic.
292.43 -> The Black Death changed the relationship between
workers and lords in Europe, for example,
296.13 -> because now that half the population was wiped
out, workers were all of the sudden pretty
300.21 -> scarce.
301.21 -> And with this higher demand for labor, power
for negotiation of wages shifted squarely
304.96 -> into the hands of the surviving workers.
306.71 -> Okay, that’s what you need to know about
the Environmental impact of trade.
310.22 -> If you’re in AP World history this year,
then subscribe to this channel and I’ll
313.15 -> help you get an A in your class and a 5 on
your exam.
315.56 -> If you like hearing about fleas honking death
on human beings, then hit the like button