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Book
Download Carol Symes - Introducing The Medieval Globe (541 KB)
Download Monica H. Green - Editor's Introduction to Pandemic Disease in the Medieval World (555 KB)
Download Monica H. Green - Taking 'Pandemic' Seriously: Making the Black Death Global (1.6 MB)
Download Anna Colet et al. - The Black Death and Its Consequences for the Jewish Community in Tàrrega: Lessons from History and Archeology (8.7 MB)
Download Sharon N. De Witte - The Anthropology of Plague: Insights from Bioarcheological Analyses of Epidemic Cemeteries (592 KB)
Download Stuart Borsch - Plague Depopulation and Irrigation Decay in Medieval Egypt (3.5 MB)
Download Ann G. Carmichael - Plague Persistence in Western Europe: A Hypothesis (3.1 MB)
Download Nükhet Varlık - New Science and Old Sources: Why the Ottoman Experience of Plague Matters (668 KB)
Download Fabian Crespo and Matthew B. Lawrenz - Heterogeneous Immunological Landscapes and Medieval Plague: An Invitation to a New Dialogue between Historians and Immunologists (2.4 MB)
Download Michelle Ziegler - The Black Death and the Future of the Plague (583 KB)
Download Robert Hymes - Epilogue: A Hypothesis on the East Asian Beginnings of the Yersinia Pestis Polytomy (656 KB)
Download Monica H. Green, Kathleen Walker-Meikle, and Wolfgang P. Müller - Diagnosis of a 'Plague' Image: A Digital Cautionary Tale (1.3 MB)
Download TMG 1 (2014): Abstracts (219 KB)
The plague organism (Yersinia pestis) killed an estimated 40% to 60% of all people when it spread rapidly through the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe in the fourteenth century: an event known as the Black Death. Previous research has shown, especially for Western Europe, how population losses then led to structural economic, political, and social changes. But why and how did the pandemic happen in the first place? When and where did it begin? How was it sustained? What was its full geographic extent? And when did it really end?
Pandemic Disease in the Medieval World is the first book to synthesize the new evidence and research methods that are providing fresh answers to these crucial questions. It was only in 2011, thanks to ancient DNA recovered from remains unearthed in London’s East Smithfield cemetery, that the full genome of the plague pathogen was identified. This single-celled organism probably originated 3000-4000 years ago and has caused three pandemics in recorded history: the Justinianic (or First) Plague Pandemic, around 541-750; the Black Death (Second Plague Pandemic), conventionally dated to the 1340s; and the Third Plague Pandemic, usually dated from around 1894 to the 1930s. This ground-breaking book brings together scholars from the humanities and social and physical sciences to address the question of how recent work in genetics, zoology, and epidemiology can enable a rethinking of the Black Death's global reach and its larger historical significance. It forms the inaugural double issue of The Medieval Globe, a new journal sponsored by the Program in Medieval Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
This issue of The Medieval Globe is published with the support of the World History Center at the University of Pittsburgh.
978-1-942401-04-9
2014
Arc Medieval Press
European History History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Medieval History Medieval Studies
Green, Monica, ed. Pandemic Disease in the Medieval World: Rethinking the Black Death. The Medieval Globe 1 (2014).
Green, Monica H.; Symes, Carol; Colet, Anna; Muntané i Santiveri, Josep Xavier; Ruíz, Jordi; Saula, Oriol; Subirà de Galdàcano, M. Eulàlia; Jáuregui, Clara; DeWitte, Sharon N.; Borsch, Stuart; Carmichael, Ann G.; Varlık, Nükhet; Crespo, Fabian; Lawrenz, Matt B.; Ziegler, Michelle; Hymes, Robert; Walker-Meikle, Kathleen; and Müller, Wolfgang P., 'TMG 1 (2014): Pandemic Disease in the Medieval World: Rethinking the Black Death, ed. Monica Green' (2014). The Medieval Globe Books. 1.
https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/medieval_globe/1
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