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Description
The same ships that brought silk and silver brought rats and death. The ships that made Venice rich also brought death. Silk, spices, and silver traveled the same routes as rats, fleas, and bacteria. When the Black Death arrived in Europe in 1347, it followed the trade networks perfectly, killing a third of the continent in four years.This book traces the deadly intersection of commerce and contagion throughout history. You will learn how prosperity and plague traveled as partners, why the most connected cities died fastest, and how the survivors rebuilt on the bones of the fallen. The patterns repeat across centuries, from medieval ports to modern airports.The Merchant's Cargo examines the price hidden in every golden age of trade. Connectivity breeds wealth and vulnerability. The merchants who grew rich importing luxury goods also imported invisible killers. Understanding this history is not pessimism. It is preparation for a world more connected than ever before.



