Reference no: EM133820325
Assignment:
Let's weave the rules with what we have already heard and seen about far off places. Even if we don't have official, written down rules about trading in Cambodia, Mexico, Timbuktu, Africa, Jerusalem or Italy, it doesn't mean they don't exist.
What narratives have implied that rules about trading existed in a similar fashion to what we see in the Novgorod document? Do the narrators compare the customs they observe with their homeland's customs?
Use Source: Canon Pietro Casola's Pilgrimage to Jerusalem in the Year 1494, Chapter XII, trans M. Margaret Newett, Man U 1907 and Source: Canon Pietro Casola's Pilgrimage to Jerusalem in the Year 1494, Chapter II, trans M. Margaret Newett, Man U 1907 and discuss the rules that you can deduce from the primary source readings. (Paragraph 9)
What narratives have implied that rules about trading existed in a similar fashion to what we see in the Novgorod document? Do the narrators compare the customs they observe with their homeland's customs?
Use Source: The Conquest of New Spain by Bernal Diaz (1975), 232-233. and discuss the rules that you can deduce from the primary source readings. (Paragraph 10)