1300-1450 A period of crisis? 1000-1300 Growth in population of Europe, leading to overpopulation c. 1300 Weather in Europe gets colder and wetter 1315-17.

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Presentation transcript:

A period of crisis? Growth in population of Europe, leading to overpopulation c Weather in Europe gets colder and wetter Famine and epidemics in Europe

Bubonic plague - buboes Septicaemic plague Pneumonic plague

1347 Plague in Italy 1348 Plague in France 1349 Plague in England 1350 Plague throughout Europe. Further outbreaks follow

1400 Population of Europe has halved 1665 Last outbreak of plague in England 1720 Last outbreak of plague in France Replacement of black rats by brown rats

Map Link: Spread of the Black Death, (Animated): < Blackdeath2.gifBlackdeath2.gif> Map Link: Spread of the Black Death, < thumb/d/dc/Bubonic_plague_map.PNG/ 640px-Bubonic_plague_map.PNG640px-Bubonic_plague_map.PNG>

1345 Faculty of Medicine at the University of Paris blames the plague on a planetary conjunction 1348 and 1349 massacres of Jews in Germany Oct 1349 Pope orders suppression of flagellants

Treatises on the “Art of Dying” Transitio/cadaver tombs Dance of Death/Danse Macabre

1370s Wages rising due to reduced workforce Sumptuary laws Attempts to limit wage increases Rebellion by peasants and urban workers in Flanders

French peasant revolt (Jacquerie), 1358: Additional causes: lack of protection of peasants from looters, taxes Origins at St Leu north of Paris, but spreads widely Bloodily suppressed

English peasants’ rebellion, 1381: Causes: Controls on wages and peasant mobility, poll tax Begins in Essex, spreads to Kent Peasants take Rochester Castle, Canterbury, march on London

King Richard II (r ) decides to negotiate and agrees to end serfdom Rebels continue attacking royal officials Peasants demand that church property be divided among laity, abolition of feudal/manorial system, but in a scuffle Mayor Walworth kills Wat Tyler Rebels dispersed peacefully, but king revokes charters

Johannes de Trokelowe Monk at Abbey of St Albans, England Contributor to Annales Monasterii Sancti Albani, abbey chronicle

Giovanni Boccaccio ( ) Son of wealthy merchant from Certaldo or Florence Studied canon law but became writer Lived in Naples and Florence, then served as diplomat from 1350

Giovanni Boccaccio ( ) Various works, incl. Decameron, completed 1358 Eventually retired, then mostly in Certaldo, where died

Jean Froissart (1330s-after 1404) Clergyman from Valenciennes in France Devoted to writing of literature, attracted patronage of nobility and royalty Chroniques

Anonimalle Chronicle Chronicle written at Abbey of St Mary, York French, covers in various manuscripts