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B1 متوسط الإنجليزية 14:09 Educational

Medieval Europe: Crash Course European History #1

CrashCourse · 3,533,648 مشاهدات · أُضيف منذ 3 أسابيع

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00:00

Hello and welcome to Crash Course European history, I'm John Green,

00:03

and as you may know medieval Europe has a terrible reputation.

00:07

We often hear that it was disease and famine-ridden (which it was).

00:12

Children were supposedly forced to marry at six or eight or ten years old, which was not common,

00:17

although people did start marrying younger,

00:20

in part because they were also dying younger.

00:22

We hear that knights in shining armor slaughtered wantonly, albeit with good manners called chivalry, which is partly true,

00:29

although the chivalric code was in decline.

00:32

And we also hear that it wasn't safe to drink the water, so they drank beer exclusively,

00:36

which more on that in a moment. But yeah, today we're turning our attention to these so-called "Middle Ages."

00:51

But right, so about beer. In those days, people did drink beer and ale.

00:56

The were nutritious (and still are), but they also drank other things: milk, other beverages, and especially water.

01:03

There were wells with safe and delicious drinking water.

01:06

Still, it's true that a lot of bad things did happen in the 14th and 15th centuries:

01:10

The Black Death, the Great Schism in the Catholic Church, and the Hundred Years War.

01:15

Also, in the 14th century,

01:16

the Little Ice Age began, which meant cooler temperatures and declining harvests,

01:21

and that contributed to stunting and starvation.

01:24

But let's begin with the Black Death, a huge pandemic of a disease called Bubonic Plague,

01:29

which spread to Europe from Asia. Many experts believe the plague originated in Tibet as a localized epidemic

01:36

but then spread carried by rats and mice and fleas.

01:40

And those animals were able to travel widely because humans were traveling, and the fleas and rats hitched rides with us,

01:47

so in that sense,

01:48

the plague was a product of growing human interconnectedness.

01:52

Bubonic plague is a horrible disease. After infection with the bacterium Yersinia Pestis,

01:58

lymph nodes swell and sometimes burst; victims often get high fevers and vomit blood;

02:05

gangrene can cause extremities and facial features to turn black with necrosis,

02:10

hence "the Black Death";

02:12

and depending on the strain, somewhere between 50 and 60 percent of people infected died.

02:18

These days, bubonic plague is treatable by antibiotics,

02:22

But such treatments have only been around for a few decades. As recently as the 20th century, outbreaks in India and China

02:29

killed more than 12 million people.

02:31

But the 14th century's Black Death was even worse.

02:35

Around 25 million people had died in Asia by the time the plague reached Constantinople in 1347,

02:40

and within four years, a staggering number of Europeans had died from it,

02:46

often within two days of becoming infected.

02:49

People faced a heartbreaking decision: whether to risk caring for their ailing loved ones,

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