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Beena Khan is a storyteller that brings grim fairytales, myths, and legends to life. Subscribe to her newsletter for exclusive content, upcoming releases, cover reveals, ARCS, excerpts, teasers, giveaways, and book trailers! Follow the platforms: Instagram➜ Twitter➜ Facebook➜ Beena's Beastlys➜.

In the 14th century, the Mongols could have purposely spread the black plague by catapulting infected bodies into towns, according to research published via Montana State University.Beena Khan is a storyteller that brings grim fairytales, myths, and legends to life. The fact that he might have contracted the bubonic plague himself is a good argument that the Mongol armies might have carried and spread the disease as they moved through Asia. Without access to his remains (his burial place has never been located), it's impossible to prove (via Live Science).

But looking into historical text, researchers found that the fever and symptoms described as being the cause of his death matched those appearing in people suffering from the bubonic plague rather than typhoid fever or other theories considered before. For centuries, historians have offered many theories about how he died, including being shot with an infected arrow, dying of blood loss, getting killed during battle, and even falling from his horse. Recent studies into the death of Genghis Khan show that he might have died of the same disease he helped spread.
