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Mankind The Story of All of Us Episode 6/12 Survivors

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    Narrator: We are survivors.
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    [yelling]
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    Mankind brought low by disease, war, devastation,
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    [music]
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    but now, we harness new riches and new powers.
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    We look beyond the world we know,
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    [music]
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    and together, rise again.
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    [music]
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    Amidst the chaos of a unforgiving planet, most species will fail,
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    but for one, all the pieces will fall into place, and a set of keys will unlock a path for mankind to try.
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    This is our story, the Story of All of Us.
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    [music]
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    Narrator: 1352. The Sahara, the largest desert on the planet,
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    a searing wilderness the size of the United States,
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    the toughest challenge an explorer can face.
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    Ibn Battuta
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    He left Morocco at age 21,
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    vowing never to travel the same road twice.
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    He's explored over 40 countries, but this is his first time in the Sahara.
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    Ibn Battuta: We set off into a desert, totally devoid of settlements. There's no road, no track, only sand.
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    [music]
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    Narrator: But, at this time, the Sahara holds the key to mankind's survival.
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    [music, flashes, rodents eating]
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    Narrator: The Plague rages through Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.
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    [music]
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    It's killed up to a fifth of the world's population.
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    In the Damascus Syria, Ibn Battuta records 2,400 deaths in a single day,
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    but the Sahara is a barrier against the pandemic.
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    With temperatures up to 135 degrees, the Plague can't survive the heat of the desert.
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    [drums sounds]
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    Few living things can.
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    Sheridan: The Sahara is vast. It's the definition of a horrible place to be. There's no water, it's incredibly hot, your eyes are playing tricks on you,
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    your mind starts playing tricks on you. It's an incredible ordeal.
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    Narrator: The body's cooling system shuts down: heat stroke.
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    Oz: Then you stop sweating because you have no ability to get rid of fluid to allow you to cool down.
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    You stop thinking normally, and it's that erratic, bizarre behavior that ultimately leads to death.
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    Narrator: Ibn Battuta's life, in the hands of his traveling companions
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    the Tuareg.
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    [voices]
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    [waterdrops]
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    Nomads from North Africa, they've lived in the Sahara for a thousand years,
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    trading something that we take for granted today, but what was once one of the most valuable commodities on the planet:
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    salt.
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    Bourdain: Salt was everything. Salt was literally the difference between life and death.
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    Narrator: Before refrigeration, salt was the key to preserving food.
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    It absorbs and stops bacteria from growing.
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    Salted food can last for a year without spoiling.
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    Bourdain: Access to salt determined whether you were powerful enough.
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    I can't send an army across the water or a great distances without provisions, and their provisions are going to go bad if they are not salted.
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    Narrator: The Tuareg have discovered a rich supply,
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    under their feet.
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    Millions of years ago, the Sahara was a sea.
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    As the water evaporated, it left behind huge salt deposits.
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    The salt trade is the Tuareg's livelihood.
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    They mine it at Taghaza in the middle of the Sahara and then trek hundreds of miles south
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    to the markets in the great cities of the Mali Empire: Jenne, Gao, and Timbuktu.
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    But it is a dangerous journey in a deadly landscape.
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    [music]
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    [wind]
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    The greatest fear of every traveler:
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    the sandstorm
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    [music, yelling]
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    Whipped up in seconds, by 70 miles per hour winds.
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    Sheridan: When a sandstorm hits, it fills the air with sand, fills your lungs, fills your eyes and your nose. You can't see.
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    [voices]
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    This wind and this sand can strip the paint off a car.
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    You have to get shelter or you die.
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    [wind, camel groaning]
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    [yelling]
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    Buttata: One of our party was lost in the desert. After that, I never went ahead or never lagged behind again.
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    [music]
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    Narrator: After two months in the Sahara, Ibn Battuta's camel train reaches its destination,
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    the cities of Mali.
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    [voices]
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    Battuta: Travelers have nothing to fear. They gave me gifts of food and treated me with the utmost generosity.
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    May God reward them for their kindness.
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    Narrator: Tuareg merchants can now trade their precious cargo.
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    In Mali, salt is so in demand; it's traded for for gold.
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    Today, most gold in the world has to be mined deep underground.
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    In Mali, it flows out of the bedrock of the River Niger.
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    [water]
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    At this time, as much as two-thirds of the world's known gold preserves are in West Africa
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    the key that turns Mali's rulers into some of the richest men in the world,
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    and their cities into centers of learning.
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    [voices]
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    Timbuktu University, one of the oldest in the world.
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    The first in sub-Saharan Africa, up to 25,000 people, a quarter of the population, students.
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    Over 300,000 scrolls
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    one of the greatest libraries in the Islamic world
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    Gates: Scholars from lots and lots of places went there to study the scrolls. It was the world-wide web. It was the place where information was known.
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    Narrator: This is Africa's Golden Age.
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    In the south, great Zimbabwe, gleaming city of stone, legendary site of King Solomon's mines
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    In the highlands of Ethiopia, an ancient Christian empire, claiming to descend from the Queen of Sheba
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    and on the east coast, Kilwa, one of Africa's busiest ports.
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    Ibn Battuta will return to Morocco and write the oldest surviving account of Timbuktu
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    and the wealth of Africa.
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    The Tuareg will carry their gold back across the Sahara.
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    Its destination, across the Mediterranean to Europe.
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    African gold will be key to the greatest explosion of ideas the Western World has ever known.
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    It will make some men rich and others, reckless.
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    Venice: 117 mud islands joined together
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    become a thriving center of commerce.
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    Silk from the Middle East
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    spices from India,
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    and the key to its wealth:
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    gold from Africa.
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    A young Venetian, Pietro Venier,
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    hoping to get rich as a partner in a bank,
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    the Priuli Brothers.
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    70 years earlier, the Plague wiped out half the population of Venice.
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    But in the story of mankind, disaster creates opportunity.
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    Hejeebu: Venice is the nursery of modern banking and finance.
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    It is the cradle of capitalism.
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    In the 15th and 16th centuries, it is the place to be. It's absolutely the place to be.
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    [voices]
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    Narrator: In Venice, African gold is minted into ducats, an international currency.
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    Merchants bank their ducats with men like Pierre Trogannier.
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    [voices, laughing]
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    Modern banking begins in Italy.
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    at the benches, the banca, where money changes hands.
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    Hejeebu: They would go to banks to borrow for personal loans, and they would go to banks to borrow for commercial loans,
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    many of the same reasons we go to banks today.
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    Narrator: But Venice is a magnet for the disadvantaged, lured by its wealth.
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    Enrico, an unemployed migrant,
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    hungry and tempted.
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    [yelling]
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    340 ducats, over two pounds of gold
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    Petro Veniere has no choice. He must capture him.
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    [music]
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    Hejeebu: When the trust in your banker disappears, the banker's future has disappeared.
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    His word doesn't count for anything. His promises don't count, and if your promises don't count, you're out of business.
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    [groans]
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    Narrator: The authorities hang Enrico. There's no mercy for thieves in Venice.
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    It's men like Pietro Veniere, who will finance the Renaissance
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    the greatest flourishing of learning and culture mankind has ever known.
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    [music]
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    After the devastation of the Plague, a rebirth.
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    Hejeebu: We have works of art, works of architecture, palaces, schools, academies.
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    All of the human arts flourish when banking flourishes.
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    They were buying collections for themselves, but they were meant for eternity.
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    Narrator: 5,000 miles away, China is on the brink of its own rebirth,
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    the key, a deadly new invention.
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    [gunshots]
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    For a century and a half, the Mongols have ruled China.
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    [fighting]
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    but the Plague has killed millions, loosening their grip on power.
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    [yelling, sword strikes]
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    1356, outside Nanjing,
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    a gang of three plots a revolution.
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    their leader Zhu Yuanzhang
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    born dirt poor, orphaned by the plague.
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    Narrator Agnes: Zhu Yuanzhang was a peasant.
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    he was a ordinary man but he had extraordinary drive.
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    [sounds of voices]
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    Narrator: His men called themselves the red turban's.
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    [sounds of men fighting]
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    Peasant's turned rebels.
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    Narrator: People have nothing to eat. And when a rebel leader comes along and says drive out the Mongols there's universal enthusiasm.
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    Narrator: By his side his young wife Ma.
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    [loud sounds]
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    daughter of a warlord, partner in the revolution.
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    [music]
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    Narrator: Ma and Zhu were a match made in heaven: and together they were perfect partners in this rebellion.
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    Narrator: Third member of the gang, Jiao Yu.
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    [loud sounds]
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    Master craftsman, weapons expert.
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    [sounds of swords swiping]
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    Narrator: Jiao Yu was not just a soldier, but one of the great brains behind this operation.
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    [horses galloping]
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    Narrator: Mongols soldiers are trained to use a bow and arrow, with deadly accuracy.
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    [sound of bow being shot]
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    [Music]
Title:
Mankind The Story of All of Us Episode 6/12 Survivors
Video Language:
English
Duration:
46:06

English subtitles

Incomplete

Revisions