The Black Death: A History from Beginning to End
3.5/5
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Black Death
History
Plague
Population Decline
Ebooks
Historical Event
Disease Outbreak
Historical Fiction
Survival
Medical Mystery
Apocalypse
Medical Thriller
Social Change
Medical Crisis
Societal Collapse
Society
Europe
Medicine
Consequences
About this ebook
Sweeping across the known world with unchecked devastation, the Black Death claimed between 75 million and 200 million lives in four short years. In this engaging and well-researched book, the trajectory of the plague's march west across Eurasia and the cause of the great pandemic is thoroughly explored.
Inside you will read about...
✓ What was the Black Death?
✓ A Short History of Pandemics
✓ Chronology & Trajectory
✓ Causes & Pathology
✓ Medieval Theories & Disease Control
✓ Black Death in Medieval Culture
✓ Consequences
Fascinating insights into the medieval mind's perception of the disease and examinations of contemporary accounts give a complete picture of what the world's most effective killer meant to medieval society in particular and humanity in general.
Hourly History
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Reviews for The Black Death
9 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Straightforward, very short overview. A good jumping board if you simply want to know what the Black Death was.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Short intro to the history of humanities second worse proportional and first in absolute deaths, plague. It does have a few technical errors e.g. Author starts there are 3 types of Y. Pesti bacteria which suggest 3 separate strains but what he really describes is three different presentations of signs of the same strain that arose by the different modes of entry into the body.
I think he also exaggerates the difficulty of treating the disease with modern antibiotics. Like any infection, the key lays in early detection and treatment.
Book preview
The Black Death - Hourly History
Introduction
The medieval world was ruthless, unforgiving and pestilential. This was perhaps most clearly demonstrated in the swift and vicious trajectory of a disease throughout the known world, then described as the Black Death.
Considered to be history’s most devastating pandemic, the Black Death claimed anywhere between 75 to 200 million lives within four short years as it marched across Europe, Scandinavia, Northern Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia.
Between 30% - 60% of the population of Europe at the time was devastated, and estimates suggest that the Black Death reduced the world’s total population from 450 million people to approximately 350 million. Because accurate records were not kept at the time, firstly due to primitive administration and secondly (and perhaps most tellingly) due to the sheer enormity of deaths occurring on a daily basis, it is not possible to come to more specific figures.
Even though the statistical records of the time were few and far between, contemporary accounts and artistic renderings provide details about the effects of the Black Death on medieval society. Given these details and accounts, we know that the Black Death was a plague, and is also referred to as The Plague, The Great Pestilence, and the Great Mortality. Plague by definition is a bacterial infection in either the lymph system, the respiratory system, or the cardiovascular system depending on the type of plague contracted. Plague still exists today, although it is considerably rarer than in medieval times.
The Black Death’s effects were sweeping and consequential. Societal and economic upheavals were the natural products of such a devastating pandemic, and the ramifications of the Black Death were long-lasting and widespread. Population devastation of such a considerable level led to massive economic decline, an increase in criminal activity, and a general lack of consideration for the value of human life. Superstition reigned supreme and religious persecution claimed numerous lives along with the Black Death itself.
It was not a happy time to be alive.
Contemporary accounts and reflections in art show the despair and horror felt by the people living through this pandemic. The disease’s quick and unrelenting march across the face of the known world left no room for romance and idealism, and catalyzed a shift in the art and literature of the day that paved the way for the Renaissance one hundred years later.
This book investigates the birth and dissemination of the Black Death across the known world, giving detail about the disease itself as well as the consequences of the pandemic on medieval society in general. It seeks to illuminate the reader with enough information to be well-informed, and perhaps to catalyze investigation further into other corners of the sweeping effects of The Plague.
Chapter One
What was the Black Death?
The terrible thing about the Black Death is that no one at