SOLDES
Jusqu'à -70% sur une sélection d'articles*
Nouveauté
The Conquistadors' Smallpox War: How Disease, Not Steel, Conquered the New World
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
- Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony
, qui est-ce ?Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement
Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
- FormatePub
- ISBN8235305069
- EAN9798235305069
- Date de parution07/07/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
The conquistadors didn't conquer the Americas. Smallpox did. The story you learned is tidy: a few hundred Spaniards, armored and ruthless, toppled two of the largest empires on Earth. Cortés outwitted the Aztecs. Pizarro out-marched the Inca. Steel, horses, and nerve against millions. It makes for a thrilling legend - and it gets the weight of history badly wrong. The Spanish brought something far deadlier than swords: Old World disease against populations that had never encountered it.
Smallpox swept Tenochtitlan after the Spanish were driven out, killing the emperor Cuitláhuac and gutting the city before Cortés ever returned to besiege it. In the Andes, the plague ran ahead of Pizarro, killing the Inca Huayna Capac and igniting the civil war that split the empire in two. When the conquistadors arrived, they were not facing intact civilizations. They were walking into the ruins of a catastrophe already underway.
Across the long sixteenth century, roughly nine in ten Indigenous people died - the largest demographic collapse in human history. This is the empirical story of how that happened, told in the tradition of Charles Mann, Alfred Crosby, and Jared Diamond: multi-causal, evidence-driven, and free of myth. What you'll discover: Why smallpox, not Spanish steel, decided the fall of Tenochtitlan and Cusco How an invisible plague crossed the Andes faster than any army could march The biological accident of the Columbian Exchange - and why it ran one direction How the "great man" legend of Cortés and Pizarro obscured the real conqueror What the 90% death toll actually means, and how historians reconstruct it Why the Americas had no comparable disease to send back across the Atlantic This book is for you if: You loved 1491, Guns, Germs, and Steel, or The Columbian Exchange You want the history behind the headlines, grounded in evidence You're fascinated by how disease shapes the fate of civilizations You prefer clear, no-nonsense narrative history over academic jargon The empires of the Americas didn't fall to better men.
They fell to a virus. Read the real story of the conquest.
Smallpox swept Tenochtitlan after the Spanish were driven out, killing the emperor Cuitláhuac and gutting the city before Cortés ever returned to besiege it. In the Andes, the plague ran ahead of Pizarro, killing the Inca Huayna Capac and igniting the civil war that split the empire in two. When the conquistadors arrived, they were not facing intact civilizations. They were walking into the ruins of a catastrophe already underway.
Across the long sixteenth century, roughly nine in ten Indigenous people died - the largest demographic collapse in human history. This is the empirical story of how that happened, told in the tradition of Charles Mann, Alfred Crosby, and Jared Diamond: multi-causal, evidence-driven, and free of myth. What you'll discover: Why smallpox, not Spanish steel, decided the fall of Tenochtitlan and Cusco How an invisible plague crossed the Andes faster than any army could march The biological accident of the Columbian Exchange - and why it ran one direction How the "great man" legend of Cortés and Pizarro obscured the real conqueror What the 90% death toll actually means, and how historians reconstruct it Why the Americas had no comparable disease to send back across the Atlantic This book is for you if: You loved 1491, Guns, Germs, and Steel, or The Columbian Exchange You want the history behind the headlines, grounded in evidence You're fascinated by how disease shapes the fate of civilizations You prefer clear, no-nonsense narrative history over academic jargon The empires of the Americas didn't fall to better men.
They fell to a virus. Read the real story of the conquest.













