implying the americas didnt have any civilizations during the medieval age?
The technology was different.
Does "medieval" apply outside the Eurasian context? Does it make any sense to categorize various indigenous American civilizations as medieval, or does the term only apply to a time period?
I may have seen it used before, but pre-Colombian almost always makes more sense. And even that label is still defining things through colonizer terms rather than indigenous ones.
Pre-(transoceanic) contact makes a lot of sense because it really deeply transformed everything.
What is this person's name i'm going to [actionable threat of violence involving stone tipped atlatls] (in minecraft)
Seriously this shit is whiter than my untanned belly.
Whiter than a dip made from mayonnaise, cream cheese, and sour cream.
Daily reminder no historian calls it "the Dark Ages." It's either the "Middle Ages" or "Medieval Ages." Never dark.
If you can't even get the fucking name right, you shouldn't be making videos, regardless of how wrong you still are.
implying the americas didnt have any civilizations during the medieval age?
The technology was different.