diffusion: the black death in the 1300s ronald wiltse september 2006

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Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

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Page 1: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

Diffusion: The Black

Death in the 1300s

Ronald Wiltse September 2006

Page 2: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

A. Where we are :1 We know the facts.

Page 3: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

A. Where we are :1 We know the facts.2 We limit our concern

to Europe.

Page 4: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

A. Where we are :1 We know the facts.2 We limit our concern to Europe.

3 We may get bogged down in the details.

Page 5: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

1 The plague itself and the nature of its

transmission

Page 6: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

2 the general curve of the

transmission

Page 7: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plague

Page 8: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

4 Footnote: recurrences

Page 9: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

I. Introduction

C. Subsidiary issues

1 How do historians determine population?

2 Where are the crowded places?

Page 10: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

A. Subsidiary issues first:

1 How do historians determine population?

► With one exception, censi are

modern phenomena.

Page 11: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

A. Subsidiary issues first:

1 How do historians determine population?

► Before: historians count hearths, view surviving baptism records.

Page 12: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

A. Subsidiary issues first:

1 How do historians determine population?

► Therefore, population historians disagree about the statistics.

Page 13: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

A. Subsidiary issues first:

1 How do historians determine population?

► Population compared with death numbers yields the death rate.

Page 14: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. DiscussionA. Subsidiary issues first:

1 How do historians determine population?

Thus:Number who died (uncertain)

divided by

Population (uncertain)equals

Death rate

Page 15: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

A. Subsidiary issues first:

2 Where are the crowded places? ► towns and cities (most people

rural; most danger urban)

Page 16: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

A. Subsidiary issues first:

2 Where are the crowded places? ► towns and cities (most people

rural; most danger urban)

► monastaries

Page 17: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 1 The plague itself and the nature of its transmission

►bacteria spread in two ways—fleas on black rats, breath

Page 18: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 1 The plague itself and the nature of its transmission

►bacteria spread in two ways—fleas on black rats, breath

►How? Traders, probably

Page 19: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 1 The plague itself and the nature of its transmission

► death rate: 25-67%

► the case of Florence (50+%)

Page 20: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 1 The plague itself and the nature of its transmission

► minority view: It was not Yersinia pestis, not spread by rats

(cf. Iceland, where there were no black rats, and the difficulty of spread along Silk Route)

Page 21: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

2 the general curve of the transmission: broader than just Europe and the approaches to Europe

Page 22: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 2 the general curve of the transmission

a. China and the Mongol world ► Outbreak occurred in the 1330s (Hubei Province)

. . .In-depth studies of this are

unknown.

►. . .reached the Black Sea by the Silk Road, specifically the Genoese port of Caffa, in the Crimean Peninsula.

Page 23: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

Genoese Caffa is modern Stary Krym.

(In addition, Mongols besieging Caffa catapulted dead plague victims over the wall) .

Today the Crimea is an autonomous

republic in Ukraine.

Page 24: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 2 the general curve of the transmission

b. Europe

bla, bla, bla

Page 25: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 2 the general curve of the transmission

b. Europe

bla, bla, bla

But notice the interesting

maps

Page 26: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006
Page 27: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006
Page 28: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006
Page 29: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion B. What is important for students to know about the plague? 2 the general curve of the transmission

c. Islam ► Alexandria reached 1347

► Mecca reached 1349

► Islamic authorities decided that the best course was to do nothing, because fleeing would be more socially disruptive.

►Apparently, the death rate was similar to that of Europe, i.e., 25-67%

Page 30: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006
Page 31: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plague

Page 32: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plague ► General: social unease

Page 33: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plague ► General: social unease

(cf. Katrina)

Page 34: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plagueSpecifically European:

► farmland abandoned, resulting in more food (Why?)

► per acre production increased (Why?)

Page 35: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plagueSpecifically European:

► fewer workers meant higher wages

► English language gained currency

Page 36: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plagueSpecifically European:

►Roman Catholic Church’s power weakened

►Reputed effects on subsequent Eastern European history

II. Discussion

Page 37: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plagueSpecifically European:

► social disorder and lasting concern for these inexplicable events

► Boccaccio set his Decameron in1348

► Ring around the Rosy

. . .

II. Discussion

Page 38: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plagueSpecifically European:

. . .And of course the ever popular

II. Discussion

Page 39: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plagueSpecifically European:

. . .And of course the ever popular

► increased persecution of Jews

Page 40: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 the effects of the plagueIslamic effects:

► governments were weakened

► extensive social disruption

► some rural areas completely depopulated

Page 41: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 Footnote : some recurrences

► Italy 1629-1531 (30 Years’ War troop movement)

Page 42: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 Footnote : some recurrences

► London 1665-1666 (but not on

London Bridge)

Page 43: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 Footnote : some recurrences► Vienna 1679

► Marseille 1720-1722

► Moscow 1771

► Bagdad 1830-1831

Page 44: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

II. Discussion

B. What is important for students to know about the plague?

3 Footnote : some recurrences► Third pandemic began in1855. All continents

affected. The plague was especially severe in China and India.

► still endemic in India, rare in Europe and the United States

Page 45: Diffusion: The Black Death in the 1300s Ronald Wiltse September 2006

Fini* *culi, cula