World History, Grades 9-12

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Patterns of Interaction Video Series


Each video in the seriesPatterns of Interactionrelates to a
Global Impactfeature in the text. These eight exciting videos
show how cultural interactions have shaped our world and how
patterns in history continue to the present day.

Volume 1

Building Empires


The Rise of the Persians and the Inca

Watch the Persian and Incan empires expand and rule


other peoples, with unexpected results for both con-


quered and conquering cultures.


Trade Connects the World


Silk Roads and the Pacific Rim

Explore the legendary trade routes of the Silk Roads


and the modern trade in the Pacific Rim, and notice


how both affect much more than economics.


Volume 2

The Spread of Epidemic Disease


Bubonic Plague and Smallpox

Look for sweeping calamities and incredible conse-


quences when interacting peoples bring devastating


diseases to one another.


The Geography of Food


The Impact of Potatoes and Sugar

Notice how the introduction of new foods to a region pro-


vides security to some and spells disaster for others.


Volume 3

Struggling Toward Democracy


Revolutions in Latin America and South Africa

Examine the impact of democratic ideas that incite


people to join revolutions in 19th-century Latin


America and 20th-century South Africa.


Technology Transforms an Age


The Industrial and Electronic Revolutions

See how another kind of revolution, caused by


innovations in industry and communication, brings


change to the modern world.


Volume 4

Arming for War


Modern and Medieval Weapons

Watch how warring peoples’ competition in military


technology has resulted in a dangerous game of


developing bigger, better, and faster weaponry


throughout the ages.


Cultural Crossroads


The United States and the World

Observe how universal enjoyments like music, sports,


and fashion become instruments of cultural blending


worldwide.


PACIFICOCEAN

ATLANTICOCEAN

EUROPE

ASIA
MONGOLIA

INDIA

SOUTHWESTASIA
AFRICA

CHINA

Kaffa

Alexandria

Genoa

00 1,0002,000 Miles Kilometers

Route of the Plague


1
3 2

Western Europe
China, India, other Asians

20–25 million
25 million
= 4 million

The horse-riding Mongols likely carried infected fleas
andsupplies as they swooped rats in their food
into China.

1

The disease came with merchants along the
trade routes ofsouthern Asia, southwest Asia to^
Asia, and Africa.

2

In 1345–1346, aarmy besieged Kaffa. A Mongol
yearmerchants later, Italian returned to
Italy, unknowinglythe plague with them. bringing

3

The Bubonic Plague
Thethrough many areas bubonic plague, or Black of the world. Death, was It wiped out two-thirds of the population in some a killer disease that swept repeatedly
areas of China, destroyed populations of Muslimdecimated one-third of the European population. towns in Southwest Asia, and then


Disease SpreadsBlack rats carried fleas that were infested with a bacillus
called all had fleas andYersinia pestis lice.. Because In addition, medieval people threw people did not bathe, almost
their garbage andstreets became breeding grounds for sewage into the streets. These unsanitary more rats. The fleas
carried bythe bubonic rats leapt from plague with incredible person to speed. person, thus spreading
Symptoms of the Bubonic Plague• Painful swellings called buboes (BOO•bohz) in the lymph nodes,


  • Sometimes purplish orparticularly those in the blackish spots armpits and groin on the skin

  • Extremely high fever, chills, delirium, and in most cases, death
    Death Tolls, 1300s 1.HypothesizingHad people known
    the cause of the bubonic plague,what might they have done to slow
    its spread?See Skillbuilder Handbook, page R15.
    2.Comparingmight be compared to the bubonicWhat diseases of today
    plague? Why?
    400 Chapter 14


Patterns of Interactionvideo series
TheBubonic Spread of Epidemic Plague and Smallpox Disease:
The spread of disease hastragic result of cultures interacting with been a very
one another across place and time. Suchdiseases as smallpox and influenza have
killedwith the Aztecs—virtually destroying millions of people, sometimes—as
civilizations.

The disk icon in the


Global Impactfeature provides


you with a link to thePatterns


of Interactionvideo series.


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Free download pdf