caketastydelish
Deity
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2008
- Messages
- 9,718
Fair enough
Why didn't the Mongols travel east to Alaska and then south to America (presumably to conquer it)?
Was there something stopping them? It's certainly no farther away than it was to North America. They didn't have success against Japan but the Native Americans didn't have those kinds of fortified defenses.
...The Pacific Ocean?![]()
The Bering Strait ?
I meant, the the forms of racism associated with European-descended societies of the late and early modern era. That is what this conversation was about.
That anti-semitism did not start out as racism, and arguably was never such. It was a religious conflict, between hegemonic region and a minor one. Made worse by the fact that members of that sometimes happened to be wealthy and visible.
"blood purity" was a thing only for the nobility. Ennoblement of, even say knighting, a black person would cause scandal because he could not obviously be a descendant of the old nobility (it could still happen, but only against the opposition of the nobility!). And accusations of having jewish ancestors were about the same: failure to have a pure lineage... this was a late medieval/early modern phenomenon, the usual thing that happens when stable elites try to fasten their grip on power and exclude all outside possible competitors. Down below, among the masses who were excluded from political power by those elites, people did not care to trace "blood purity". The ideology was not pervasive, need not be, and in that it was not what is now conventionally called racism. It did have elements of it, but was more complex.
I'm not familiar enough with the social stratification of spanish america to feel able to comment on how these ideas developed there. Only know that they did develop into stratified societies but there was some mobility between strata. Birth (and ethnicity) were only in practice a barrier to certain top offices?
How far were people in Medieval Europe aware of the relationships between different languages? I know that they were vaguely aware that French, Castilian, etc. all derived from Latin, while at the same time they were not aware that the Brythonic and Gaelic languages were related, but what about things in between that, such as, for example, the relationship between the different Germanic languages or Slavic languages? Or the non-relationship between Basque and everything else?
Unlike the Falklands, China couldn't just show up on the beaches of Hong Kong with some marines and say "it's ours now".
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How did Hannibal get his elephants across the Mediterranean? I'm struggling to imagine the logistics of it. How do you feed them, what do you do with the massive amounts of stool and urine, where do you put them?
@Cutlass and @Ajidica have basically already answered this question. We don't know exactly how the Carthaginians transported elephants from Africa to Spain and Sicily, but the distances over which they were transported were relatively short and could be covered rapidly. Hannibal in particular definitely marched his elephants around by land where he could rather than attempting to transport them by sea the whole way.How did Hannibal get his elephants across the Mediterranean? I'm struggling to imagine the logistics of it. How do you feed them, what do you do with the massive amounts of stool and urine, where do you put them?