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The Black Death 1346-1353: The Complete History

door Ole Jørgen Benedictow

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"The many local studies on the Black Death published in a variety of languages and scholarly papers have for the first time been systematically collected and thoroughly analysed. The medical and epidemiological characteristics of the disease, its geographical origin, its spread across Asia Minor, the Middle East, North Africa and Europe, and the mortality in the countries and regions for which there are satisfactory studies, are clearly presented and thoroughly discussed. The pattern, pace and seasonality of spread revealed through close scrutiny of these studies exactly reflect current medical work and standard studies on the epidemiology of bubonic plague. Benedictow's findings relating to the mortality caused by the Black Death are based on the study and synthesis of all available demographic studies. Published over the past forty years, most of them in widely dispersed local journals and local histories, this cumulative evidence, astounding in its implications, has gone largely unnoticed. This book makes it indisputably clear that the true mortality rate was far higher than has been previously thought."--Jacket.… (meer)
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Toon 3 van 3
La Peste Negra fue un desastre de tal magnitud que no sólo sacudió los cimientos económicos y sociales del Viejo Mundo, sino que cambió el curso de la historia humana. El presente libro constituye la primera historia y valoración exhaustiva de su desarrollo y de la muerte y devastación que dejó tras de sí en todos los países por donde pasó. Los numerosos estudios locales sobre la Peste Negra publicados durante los últimos cuarenta años en diversos idiomas y en una multiplicidad de artículos han sido recopilados sistemáticamente y analizados a fondo por primera vez en esta obra, que expone con claridad y analiza en detalle las características médicas y epidemiológicas de la enfermedad, su origen geográfico, su difusión por Asia Menor, Oriente Medio, el norte de África y Europa, y la mortalidad sufrida en los países y regiones para los que existen estudios satisfactorios. El modo, ritmo y estacionalidad de la propagación, revelados mediante un examen atento de esos estudios, reflejan con exactitud los trabajos médicos actuales y los estudios clásicos sobre la epidemiología de la peste bubónica. La extensa investigación de Benedictow permite ver con claridad que la verdadera tasa de mortalidad fue muy superior a la que se había pensado en el pasado. A la luz de sus descubrimientos, el análisis expuesto en la última parte del libro, donde se demuestra que la Peste Negra constituye una encrucijada de la historia, adquiere un nuevo significado.
  meltxor | Oct 17, 2022 |
I’ve already reviewed a different book on the Black Death; this one is by Norwegian historian Ole Benedictow. This is a frustrating book; there’s a lot of useful and interesting material but there’s also a lot of poorly written verbiage that’s tedious to work through.


First, though, Setnahkt’s Embarrassing Confession: I had absolutely no idea that there was any doubt that the causative agent for the medieval Black Death was anything but the bubonic plague bacillus Yersina pestis. It’s especially humbling because I consider myself reasonably up-to-date on medieval history and I’m supposed to know about stuff like this for work. I didn’t find out about the controversy until after I finished this book; it explains a lot of things that I had found puzzling. It doesn’t help that Benedictow never mentions that there’s any sort of dispute over plague origins and the rationale for the way he presents his material is cryptic until the reader learns of the debate.


After a brief discussion of plague biology, bubonic versus pneumonic versus septicemic (or bacteraemic, which is the term Benedictow prefers) modes, and the rat to flea to human transmission pathway, Benedictow launches into a tedious and somewhat bizarrely written discussion of the rate and pattern of the spread of the Black Death, country by country. It’s tedious because there’s page after page after page of dates that the disease appeared in particular medieval towns - all of this could reduced to a few maps with moderate accompanying text. (Admittedly, there’s a nice color foldout of Europe with some dates and transmission routes, but this isn’t detailed enough for some of the points Benedictow is trying to make. However, a few larger scale maps of particular regions would have done the job nicely.) It’s bizarrely written because the Black Death is repeatedly anthropomorphized, as if it were a conscious actor (for example, discussing the spread of the plague in the Iberian Peninsula: “The Black Death’s conquest of these kingdoms was accomplished with a complex and amazingly efficient strategy and extraordinary impetus and pace.”) The rate and pattern chapters occupy more than half the book. It’s a tremendous accomplishment in terms of the number of original sources that the author had to work through; it’s just too bad that it’s presented in such a boring fashion. After learning about the plague cause controversy, Benedictow’s reasons for devoting so much detail to plague spread patterns is explained; critics of Yersina as the causative agent hold that the Black Death spread too fast for a flea and rat vector and must instead must have had some sort of airborne transmission, presumably a virus. Benedictow’s trying to show, in excruciating detail, that a bacterial disease could have spread as fast.



The last part of the book is about plague mortality rates. It reads almost as if it were written by a different author; although the subject sounds dry as dust - reviews of various taxation rolls, will registrations, clergy appointments, etc. - Benedictow manages to make these things reasonably interesting and easy to follow (allowing that maybe it’s just contrast with the first part). Benedictow is out of the mainstream here - conventional wisdom among historians is that the Black Death killed about 25-30% of the European population, while Benedictow holds that the number is much larger - 60% or more, about 50M people. This is a pretty amazing number; it’s hard to imagine that such a death rate wouldn’t result in a complete collapse of society, but Benedictow’s numbers and methods seem convincing. There’s a very short - 8 pages in a 400 page book - chapter on the implications of this: the population shortage makes wages go up tremendously, leading to a more equal distribution of income and the development of a middle class. This sounds plausible enough, but there’s very little presentation of actual evidence, especially in contrast with the level of detail in other sections.


I can’t give this one any more than three stars, with the acknowledgment that some parts are very interesting indeed. ( )
  setnahkt | Dec 21, 2017 |
So scholarly and dense that it takes awhile to sink in that the enormity of the carnage is so much worse than we've been taught before. My favorite book about the plague heretofore was Ziegler's classic The Black Death, but Benedictow reinterprets the same data and adds even more detail to the canon. The footnotes are as good as the text.

I did find it fairly repetitive in spots. Not because of the repetitive nature of the disease entering a village and killing most everyone, but because Benedictow does have a tendency to bludgeon the reader with facts he's concerned we might miss.

Still, an amazing piece of work. ( )
1 stem satyridae | Apr 5, 2013 |
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"The many local studies on the Black Death published in a variety of languages and scholarly papers have for the first time been systematically collected and thoroughly analysed. The medical and epidemiological characteristics of the disease, its geographical origin, its spread across Asia Minor, the Middle East, North Africa and Europe, and the mortality in the countries and regions for which there are satisfactory studies, are clearly presented and thoroughly discussed. The pattern, pace and seasonality of spread revealed through close scrutiny of these studies exactly reflect current medical work and standard studies on the epidemiology of bubonic plague. Benedictow's findings relating to the mortality caused by the Black Death are based on the study and synthesis of all available demographic studies. Published over the past forty years, most of them in widely dispersed local journals and local histories, this cumulative evidence, astounding in its implications, has gone largely unnoticed. This book makes it indisputably clear that the true mortality rate was far higher than has been previously thought."--Jacket.

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