Black death 1346-1353 : the complete history
Benedictow , Ole J
Black death 1346-1353 : the complete history - Woodbridge Boydell Press 2006 - xvi,433p.
Contents
List of maps, figures and tables vii
Preface xi
Acknowledgements xiii
Glossary xiv
Part One
What was the Black Death?
1. Why the history of the Black Death is important 3
2. Anatomy of a killer disease 8
3. Bubonic plague and the role of rats and fleas II
4. Plague: the Hydra-headed monster 25
5. The territorial origin of plague and of the Black Death 35
Part Two
Spread of the Black Death
6. The Caucasus, Asia Minor, the Middle East and North Africa 57
7. Mediterranean Europe 68
8. The southern Balkans: Albania, Macedonia, southern Yugoslavia, Greece 74
and Bulgaria
9. The Kingdom of Hungary: Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovakia, 75
Hungary and western Romania
10. The Iberian Peninsula: the Spanish kingdoms, the Kingdom of Portugal 77
and the Kingdom of Granada
11. Italy 91
12. France 96
13. Belgium I IO
14. Switzerland ll8
15. The British Isles 123
16. Norway 146
17. Denmark 159
18. Sweden 170
19. Austria 179
20. Germany 185
21. The Netherlands 203
22. The Baltic countries 209
23. Russia 211
24. Did some countries or regions escape? What happened in Iceland, Finland, Poland and the Kingdom of Bohemia? 216
Part Three
Patterns and Dynamics of the Blac k Death
25. Patterns of conquest, dynamics of spread 227
Part Four Mortality in the Black Death
26. The medieval demographic system 245
27. Problems of source criticism, methodology and demography 257
28. Spain 273 7. The B
29. Italy 285 8. Morta
30. France and the County of Savoy 308
31. Belgium 338
32. England 342
33. How many died in the Black Death? 380
Part Five : The Black Death : Its Impact on History
34. A Turning Point in History 387
Bibliography 395
Index 415
9781843832140
Modern movement (Architecture)
Medicine, Medieval
Diseases and history
Modernism (Art)
Designers
614.5732 / BEN
Black death 1346-1353 : the complete history - Woodbridge Boydell Press 2006 - xvi,433p.
Contents
List of maps, figures and tables vii
Preface xi
Acknowledgements xiii
Glossary xiv
Part One
What was the Black Death?
1. Why the history of the Black Death is important 3
2. Anatomy of a killer disease 8
3. Bubonic plague and the role of rats and fleas II
4. Plague: the Hydra-headed monster 25
5. The territorial origin of plague and of the Black Death 35
Part Two
Spread of the Black Death
6. The Caucasus, Asia Minor, the Middle East and North Africa 57
7. Mediterranean Europe 68
8. The southern Balkans: Albania, Macedonia, southern Yugoslavia, Greece 74
and Bulgaria
9. The Kingdom of Hungary: Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovakia, 75
Hungary and western Romania
10. The Iberian Peninsula: the Spanish kingdoms, the Kingdom of Portugal 77
and the Kingdom of Granada
11. Italy 91
12. France 96
13. Belgium I IO
14. Switzerland ll8
15. The British Isles 123
16. Norway 146
17. Denmark 159
18. Sweden 170
19. Austria 179
20. Germany 185
21. The Netherlands 203
22. The Baltic countries 209
23. Russia 211
24. Did some countries or regions escape? What happened in Iceland, Finland, Poland and the Kingdom of Bohemia? 216
Part Three
Patterns and Dynamics of the Blac k Death
25. Patterns of conquest, dynamics of spread 227
Part Four Mortality in the Black Death
26. The medieval demographic system 245
27. Problems of source criticism, methodology and demography 257
28. Spain 273 7. The B
29. Italy 285 8. Morta
30. France and the County of Savoy 308
31. Belgium 338
32. England 342
33. How many died in the Black Death? 380
Part Five : The Black Death : Its Impact on History
34. A Turning Point in History 387
Bibliography 395
Index 415
9781843832140
Modern movement (Architecture)
Medicine, Medieval
Diseases and history
Modernism (Art)
Designers
614.5732 / BEN