The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval EuropeRobert S. Gottfried is Professor of History and Director of Medieval Studies at Rutgers University. Among his other books is "Epidemic Disease in Fifteenth Century England." |
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Page 106
... schools , located in Salerno , Montpellier , Bologna , Paris , Padua , and Oxford . " The school in Salerno was the first to reach prominence , in the late eleventh century , and it benefited from contacts with nearby Arabic and ...
... schools , located in Salerno , Montpellier , Bologna , Paris , Padua , and Oxford . " The school in Salerno was the first to reach prominence , in the late eleventh century , and it benefited from contacts with nearby Arabic and ...
Page 107
... schools ; among its distinguished alumni and faculty members were the leading doctors in Europe , including Bernard Gordon , Henri de Mondeville , Arnold of Villanova , and Guy de Chauliac . The medical schools at Bologna and Paris came ...
... schools ; among its distinguished alumni and faculty members were the leading doctors in Europe , including Bernard Gordon , Henri de Mondeville , Arnold of Villanova , and Guy de Chauliac . The medical schools at Bologna and Paris came ...
Page 145
... schools developed and more of their graduates went to work in the expanding governments of the thirteenth century ... schools also seem to have recovered more quickly than parochial ones . In the English town of Bury St. Edmunds , all ...
... schools developed and more of their graduates went to work in the expanding governments of the thirteenth century ... schools also seem to have recovered more quickly than parochial ones . In the English town of Bury St. Edmunds , all ...
Contents
A Natural History of Plague | 1 |
The European Environment 10501347 | 16 |
The Plagues Beginnings | 33 |
Copyright | |
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areas Asia began Black Death brought bubonic plague Cambridge University Press caused changes Christian chronicler church claimed clergy crisis Cuxham demic depopulation died doctors early fourteenth century eastern economic effect England English Europe's European example famine fifteenth century flagellants fleas Florence France Georges Duby Germany Giovanni Villani Guy de Chauliac History human important infected Italian Italy Jean de Venette John Justinian's Plague killed labor land late medieval Late Middle Ages London lords Manor manorial McNeill Medicine Medieval Mediterranean Basin merchants Middle East mortality Netherlands North northern Oxford pandemic Paris peasants perished pestis physicians plague epidemics plague morbidity plague's pneumonic plague population postplague preplague Princeton University Press public health rodent role rural scholars second plague pandemic sick Siena sixteenth smallpox social Society southern spread studies surgeons teenth century theory thirteenth century Thrupp tion town trade tury twelfth century urban villages West Western William McNeill York