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The Black Death.

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Presentation on theme: "The Black Death."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Black Death

2 The Black Death, 1347-1351 Preconditions Progress Impact of the plague
Short term Intermediate Long term

3 The Black Death, 1347-1351 Preconditions
Food Shortages (1310s) lead to death, disease, and malnutrition Concentration of populations in cities and towns International Trade Three varieties spread by fleas on black rats Bubonic: Percent Die in 3-4 Days Pneumonic: Percent Die in 1-2 Days Septicaemic: Percent Die in 1 Day Progress of disease Asian origins: Caffa on Black Sea Nov-Dec 1347 To Mediterranean by end of December Clockwise spiral through 1348 to 1350

4 Spread of the Black Death

5 The Black Death (continued)
Results: 30-40 % of population died Groups Affected: young, old, poor, & urban (Examples: Venice, Genoa, Paris) Villages and towns disappear: 40,000 in Germany by 1450 (24 % of pre-plague total) Medical “care” via trial and (much) error Medical training theoretical rather than practical

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8 Population Losses (in Millions)
1340 1450 Total Losses = c. 75 million (30-40% of the population)

9 The Black Death (continued)
Results: 30-40 % of population decimated Groups Affected: young, old, poor, & urban (examples: Venice, Genoa, Paris) Villages and towns disappear: 40,000 in Germany by 1450 (24 % of pre-plague total) Medical “care” via trial and (much) error Recurrences 6 more outbreaks by 1406 Comes back again till late 17th century European population down 75 % by 1450

10 The Black Death: Short-term Impact
Profound psychological uncertainty Life seen as cheap Adoption of extreme attitudes: hedonism and asceticism Looking for scapegoats

11 Hedonism: Portrayal in Boccaccio’s Decameron (1351)

12 Flagellants Flagellants were groups of Christians who subjected themselves to ritualized whipping as atonement for sin. in Low Countries and Germany In 1349, the Church declared the flagellants were heretics.

13 Response: Finding Scapegoats Image of Jews Poisoning Wells

14 Result: Persecution of Jews

15 Intermediate Impact: Economic Change and Rebellions
Social Dislocations on Farms and in Cities Wages Up High Demand for Luxury Goods Rents not Dues French Jacquerie, 1358 Rural terrorism Urban Revolts: Ciompi, 1378 English Peasants’ Revolt, 1381

16 Intermediate Impact: Economic Change and Rebellions
Social Dislocations on Farms and in Cities Wages Up High Demand for Luxury Goods Rents not Dues French Jacquerie, 1358 Urban Revolts: Ciompi, 1378 English Peasants’ Revolt, 1381

17 Long-Term Impacts of Plague
Family structure: men marry younger Gendering of the workplace Generalized obsession with death Ars moriendi Human/people centered L’danse macabre or the Totentanz Leveling of society

18 Dancing with Death

19 Dancing with Death

20 Long-Term Impacts of Plague
Family structure: men marry younger Gendering of the workplace Generalized obsession with death Sermons, Wills, “Ring Around the rosy” Ars moriendi: preoccupation with death in art L’danse macabre or the Totentanz Leveling of Society Human/People Centered Emacipation of the peasantry


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