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Pilgrims did not typically use established trade routes to travel. They often followed specific pilgrimage routes or paths that were significant for their religious or spiritual beliefs. These routes were separate from the commercial trade routes used for transporting goods and commodities.
Probably a gun or a sword
Astrolabe, maps, and a Portuguese pilot.
cannons, maps, spyglasses, ships, weapons - guns and crossbows
because it lead them to were they wanted to go
no, sh did not
a. Europe traded separately from Asia. b. travel time increased. c. India gained control of all trade routes. d. increased use of water trade routes.
Yes, pilgrims did use trade routes to travel. Trade routes often provided established paths and infrastructure such as roads, inns, and markets that pilgrims could take advantage of during their journeys. These routes also facilitated the exchange of goods, ideas, and cultural practices between different regions and peoples.
I can give you several sentences.The trade routes of the sailing ships reached almost all the way around the world.The ships sailed along a trade route to the next port.Land trade routes stopped at all of the major cities in Europe, Asia, and Africa.
The collapse of the Mongol Empire in the 1300s disrupted the overland Silk Road trade routes across Central Asia. Traders turned to the sea routes instead.
sea between europe and africa that people used to use as trade routes