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The Black Death
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Hunter- gatherers Industrialization Agriculture Human Population
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Crowd diseases: –Parasites, e.g. schistosomiasis –Contagious diseases, e.g. measles Epidemics Domesticated animals
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Endemic disease, Epidemics and Pandemics The Three Great Pandemics The Biology of Plague
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6 th and 7 th Centuries AD
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The Medieval Pandemic
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The Modern Pandemic
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The Biology of Plague Bacillus: Yersinia pestis
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The Biology of Plague Rattus rattus (Black Rat)
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The Biology of Plague Flea: Xenopsylla cheopis
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Types of Plague Primary Bubonic –Transmitted by fleas –Buboes –60-90% mortality
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Types of Plague - 2 Primary bacteraemic (septicaemic) Secondary bacteraemic Primary pneumonic Secondary pneumonic –Transmitted by air- borne droplets –Not too infectious
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The Black Death Origins in Central Asia, ca. 1331-1332 Slow rate of spread Importance of Mongol Empire Spreads from Tatars to Genoese colony of Caffa From there to Europe in September 1347
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How Many People Died?
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Burials at Givry, 1334-1348
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Plague Mortality in Bombay Presidency, 1897-98 LocalityPopulationDeath Rate/1,000 Bombay806,14420.1 Poona161,69631.2 Karachi97,00924.1 Sholapur61,56435.0 Kale4,431104.9 Supne2,068102.5 Ibrampur1,692360.5
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Average Duration of Life: Florence, 1276-1500 YearsAverage Life 1276-130031.4 1301-132540.1 1326-134837.3 1349-137536.5 1376-140018.0 1401-142524.4 1426-145027.9 1451-147541.1 1476-150038.9
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How Many People Died?: Conclusion Ca. one-half of population dies Population declines until ca. 1425, when stabilizes at one-third level of that of 1300 Remains at this low level until ca. 1475 Returns to level of 1300 around 1600
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But Was It Plague?
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Two types of rat needed Rattus norvegicus (brown rat) did not reach England until 1700s
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Rodent reservoir But was it plague?
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But Was It Plague? Two types of rat needed Rattus norvegicus (brown rat) did not reach England until 1700s
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But was it plague? Plague a disease of open steppes, and/or warm countries, but Spreads to Iceland and Greenland
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No reports of dead rats 40 day disease cycle, as opposed to 7-10 days for plague
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Or a Viral Hemorrhagic Fever? Characterized by bleeding and vomiting of blood Generalized necrosis Affected domestic animals Spread from human to human
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Population Movement at Prato
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Consequences Western Europe: “Golden Age” of the Peasantry –Rents decline –Wages rise –Serfdom disappears in W. Europe
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Population Movements: England
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Consequences - 2 Intensifies political and social conflict –“Seigneurial reaction” –Peasant revolts/urban worker revolts –Increased competition among aristocrats for control of shrinking numbers of peasant, leading to Increased civil war Increased inter-state war
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