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Black Death in England

The Black Death was a bubonic plague pandemic, which reached England in June 1348. It was the first and most severe manifestation of the second pandemic, caused by Yersinia pestis bacteria. The term Black Death was not used until the late 17th century.

Originating in Asia, it spread west along the trade routes across Europe and arrived on the British Isles from the English province of Gascony. The plague was spread by flea-infected rats, as well as individuals who had been infected on the continent. Rats were the reservoir hosts of the Y. pestis bacteria and the Oriental rat flea was the primary vector.

The first-known case in England was a seaman who arrived at Weymouth, Dorset, from Gascony in June 1348.[1] By autumn, the plague had reached London, and by summer 1349 it covered the entire country, before dying down by December. Low estimates of mortality in the early twentieth century have been revised upwards due to re-examination of data and new information, and a figure of 40–60 percent of the population is widely accepted.

The most immediate consequence was a halt to the campaigns of the Hundred Years' War. In the long term, the decrease in population caused a shortage of labour, with subsequent rise in wages, resisted by the landowners, which caused deep resentment among the lower classes. The Peasants' Revolt of 1381 was largely a result of this resentment, and even though the rebellion was suppressed, in the long term serfdom was ended in England. The Black Death also affected artistic and cultural efforts, and may have helped advance the use of the vernacular.

In 1361–62 the plague returned to England, this time causing the death of around 20 per cent of the population. After this the plague continued to return intermittently throughout the 14th and 15th centuries, in local or national outbreaks. From this point on its effect became less severe, and one of the last outbreaks of the plague in England was the Great Plague of London in 1665–1666.

Background

England in the mid-14th century

 
The Battle of Crécy established England as a military power.

It is impossible to establish with any certainty the exact number of inhabitants in England at the eve of the Black Death, and estimates range from 3 to 7 million.[2] The number is probably in the higher end, and an estimate of around 6 million inhabitants seems likely.[3] Earlier demographic crises—in particular the Great Famine of 1315–1317—had resulted in great numbers of deaths, but there is no evidence of any significant decrease in the population prior to 1348.[4] England was still a predominantly rural and agrarian society; close to 90 per cent of the population lived in the countryside.[5] Of the major cities, London was in a class of its own, with perhaps as many as 70,000 inhabitants.[6] Further down the scale were Norwich, with around 12,000 people, and York with around 10,000.[5] The main export, and the source of the nation's wealth, was wool. Until the middle of the century the export had consisted primarily of raw wool to cloth makers in Flanders. Gradually though, the technology for cloth making used on the Continent was appropriated by English manufacturers, who started an export of cloths around mid-century that would boom over the following decades.[7]

Politically, the kingdom was evolving into a major European power, through the youthful and energetic kingship of Edward III.[8] In 1346, the English had won a decisive battle over the Scots at the Battle of Neville's Cross,[9] and it seemed that Edward III would realise his grandfather Edward I's ambition of bringing the Scots under the suzerainty of the English crown.[10] The English were also experiencing military success on the continent. Less than two months before the Battle of Neville's Cross, a numerically inferior English army led by the king himself won a spectacular victory over the French royal forces at the Battle of Crécy.[11] The victory was immediately followed by Edward laying siege to the port city of Calais. When the city fell the next year, this provided the English with a strategically important enclave that would remain in their possession for over two centuries.[12]

The Black Death

 
The migration of the Black Death across Europe

The term "Black Death"—which refers to the first and most serious outbreak of the second pandemic—was not used by contemporaries, who preferred such names as the "Great Pestilence" or the "Great Mortality".[13] It was not until the 17th century that the term under which we know the outbreak today became common, probably derived from Scandinavian languages.[14] It is generally agreed today that the disease in question was plague, caused by Yersinia pestis bacteria.[15] These bacteria are carried by fleas, which can be transferred to humans through contact with rats. Flea bites carry the disease into the lymphatic system, through which it makes its way to the lymph nodes. Here the bacteria multiply and form swellings called buboes, from which the term bubonic plague is derived.[16] After three or four days the bacteria enter the bloodstream, and infect organs such as the spleen and the lungs. The patient will then normally die after a few days.[17] A different strain of the disease is pneumonic plague, where the bacteria become airborne and enter directly into the patient's lungs. This strain is far more virulent, as it spreads directly from person to person. These types of infection probably both played a significant part in the Black Death, while a third strain was more rare. This is the septicaemic plague, where the flea bite carries the bacteria directly into the blood stream, and death occurs very rapidly.[18]

A study reported in 2011 of skeletons exhumed from the Black Death cemetery in East Smithfield, London, found Yersinia pestis DNA. An archaeological dig in the vicinity of Thornton Abbey in Lincolnshire was reported in the science section of The Guardian for 30 November 2016, not only confirming evidence of the Y. pestis DNA in the human remains exhumed there but also dating the remains to mid-1349.

Genotyping showed that it was [at that time] a newly evolved strain, ancestor of all modern strains and proved the Black Death was bubonic plague. Modern medical knowledge suggests that because it was a new strain, the human immune system would have had little or no defence against it, helping to explain the plague's virulence and high death rates.[19]

The Black Death seems to have originated in Central Asia, where the Y. pestis bacterium is endemic in the rodent population. It is unknown exactly what caused the outbreak, but a series of natural occurrences likely brought humans into contact with the infected rodents.[20] The epidemic reached Constantinople in the late spring of 1347, through Genoese merchants trading in the Black Sea.[21] From here it reached Sicily in October that same year, and by early 1348 it had spread over the entire Italian mainland.[22] It spread rapidly through France, and had reached as far north as Paris by June 1348. Moving simultaneously westward, it arrived in the English province of Gascony around the same time.[23]

Progress of the plague

In this year, in Melcombe, in the county of Dorset, a little before the Feast of St. John the Baptist, two ships, one of them from Bristol, came alongside. One of the sailors had brought with him from Gascony the seeds of the terrible pestilence and through him the men of the town of Melcombe were the first in England to be infected.

Grey Friars' Chronicle[24]

According to the chronicle of the grey friars at King's Lynn, the plague arrived by ship from Gascony to Melcombe in Dorset—today normally referred to as Weymouth—shortly before the Feast of St. John the Baptist on 24 June 1348.[25] Other sources mention different points of arrival, including Bristol and Southampton.[26] Though the plague might have arrived independently at Bristol at a later point, the Grey Friars' Chronicle is considered the most authoritative account.[27] If it is assumed that the chronicle reports the first outbreak of the plague, rather than its actual arrival, then the arrival most likely happened around 8 May.[28]

From Weymouth the disease spread rapidly across the south-west. The first major city to be struck was Bristol.[29] The disease reached London in the autumn of 1348, before most of the surrounding countryside. This had certainly happened by November, though according to some accounts as early as 29 September.[30] Arrival in London happened by three principal roads: overland from Weymouth—through Salisbury and Winchester—overland from Gloucester, and along the coast by ship.[31] The full effect of the plague was felt in the capital early the next year.[32] Conditions in London were ideal for the plague: the streets were narrow and flowing with sewage, and houses were overcrowded and poorly ventilated.[33] By March 1349 the disease was spreading haphazardly across all of southern England.[34]

During the first half of 1349 the Black Death spread northwards. A second front opened up when the plague arrived by ship at the Humber, after which it spread both south and north.[35] In May it reached York, and during the summer months of June, July and August, it ravaged the north.[36] Certain northern counties, like Durham and Cumberland, had been the victim of violent incursions from the Scots, and were therefore left particularly vulnerable to the devastations of the plague.[37] Pestilence is less virulent during the winter months, and spreads less rapidly.[38] The Black Death in England had survived the winter of 1348–49, but during the following winter it gave in, and by December 1349 conditions were returning to relative normality.[39] It had taken the disease approximately 500 days to traverse the entire country.[40]

Medical practice

Various methods were used including sweating, bloodletting, forced vomiting and urinating to treat patients infected with the plague.[41] Several symptoms of the illness included blotches, hardening of the glands under the groin and underarms, and dementia.[42] Within the initial phase of the disease, bloodletting was performed on the same side of where the physical manifestations of the buboes or risings appeared. For instance, if a rising appeared on the right side of the groin the physician would bleed a vein in the ankle on the same side.[43] In the case of sweating, it was achieved with such medicines as Mithridate, Venice-Treacle, Matthiolus, Bezoar-Water, Serpentary Roots and Electuarium de Ovo.[44] Sweating was used when measures were desperate; if a patient had tokens, a severe version of risings, the physician would wrap the naked patient in a blanket drenched in cold water. This measure was only performed while the patient still had natural heat in his system. The desired effect was to make the patient sweat violently and thus purge all corruption from the blood which was caused by the disease.[45]

Another practice was the use of pigeons when treating swellings. Swellings which were white in appearance and deep were unlikely to break and were anointed with Oil of Lillies or Camomil.[46] Once the swelling rose to a head and was red in appearance and not deep in the flesh, it was broken with the use of a feather from a young pigeon's tail. The feather's fundament was held to the swelling and would draw out the venom. However, if the swelling dropped and became black in appearance, the physician had to be cautious when drawing the cold from the swelling. If it was too late to prevent, the physician would take the young pigeon, cut it open from breast to back, break it open and apply the pigeon (while still alive) over the cold swelling. The cupping therapy was an alternative method which was heated and then placed over the swellings. Once the sore was broken, the physician would apply Mellilot Plaister with Linimentum Arcei and heal the sore with digence.[47]

Victims

Death toll

Although historical records for England were more extensive than those of any other European country,[48] it is still extremely difficult to establish the death toll with any degree of certainty. Difficulties involve uncertainty about the size of the total population, as described above, but also issues regarding the proportion of the population that died from the plague. Contemporary accounts are often grossly inflated, stating numbers as high as 90 per cent.[49] Modern historians give estimates of death rates ranging from around 25 per cent to more than 60 per cent of the total population.

The pioneering work in the field was made by Josiah William Russell in his 1948 British Medieval Population. Russell looked at inquisitions post mortem (IPMs)—taken by the crown to assess the wealth of the greatest landowners after their death—to assess the mortality caused by the Black Death, and from this arrived at an estimate of 23.6 per cent of the entire population.[50] He also looked at episcopal registers for the death toll among the clergy, where the result was between 30 and 40 per cent.[51] Russell believed the clergy was at particular risk of contagion, and eventually concluded with a low mortality level of only 20 per cent.[52]

Several of Russell's assumptions have been challenged, and the tendency since has been to adjust the assessment upwards.[53] Philip Ziegler, in 1969, estimated the death rate to be at around one third of the population.[54] Jeremy Goldberg, in 1996, believed a number closer to 45 per cent would be more realistic.[55] A 2004 study by Ole Jørgen Benedictow suggests the exceptionally high mortality level of 62.5 per cent.[56] Assuming a population of 6 million, this estimate would correspond to 3,750,000 deaths. Such a high percentage would place England above the average that Benedictow estimates for Western Europe as a whole, of 60 per cent.[56] A death rate at such a high level has not been universally accepted in the historical community.[57]

In 2016, Carenza Lewis reported the results of a new method of assessing the death toll. She argued that pottery before and after the Black Death is datable because there was a change at that time from the high medieval to the late medieval style, and that counts of pottery of each type therefore provide a useful proxy for long term changes in population. She and her colleagues analysed pottery sherds from test pits in more than 50 continuously occupied rural settlements in eastern England, and found a decline in the number of pottery producing pits of 45 per cent. Norfolk had the greatest drop of 65 per cent, while there was no drop in 10 per cent of settlements, mostly commercial centres.[58]

Impact of the Black Death: 1349

Archbishop Zouche of York issued a warning throughout the diocese in July 1348 (when the epidemic was raging further south) of "great mortalities, pestilences and infections of the air".

The Great Mortality, as it was then known, entered Yorkshire around February 1349 and quickly spread through the diocese. The clergy were on the front line of the disease, bringing comfort to the dying, hearing final confessions and organising burials. This, almost by necessity, put them at a greater risk of infection.

Estimates suggest that the death rate of clergy in some parts of the archdiocese could have been as high as 48 per cent. This is reflected in the Ordination Register, which shows a massive rise in ordained clergy over the period—some being recruited before the arrival of plague in a clerical recruitment drive, but many once plague had arrived, replacing those who had been killed. In 1346, 111 priests and 337 acolytes were recruited. In 1349, 299 priests and 683 acolytes are named, with 166 priests being ordained in one session alone in February 1350."[59]

Social distribution

Russell had trusted the IPMs to give a true picture of the national average, because he assumed death rates to be relatively equal across the social spectrum.[60] This assumption has been proven wrong, and studies of peasant plague mortality from manor rolls have returned much higher rates. This could be a consequence of the elite's ability to avoid infection by escaping plague-infected areas. It could also result from lower post-infection mortality among those more affluent, due to better access to care and nursing.[61] If so, this would also mean that the mortality rates for the clergy—who were normally better off than the general population—were no higher than the average.[62]

...destructive Death (who seizes young and old alike, sparing no one and reducing rich and poor to the same level) has lamentably snatched from both of us our dearest daughter, (whom we loved best of all, as her virtues demanded).

Edward III in a letter to King Alfonso of Castile[63]

The manorial records offer a good opportunity to study the geographical distribution of the plague. Its effect seems to have been about the same all over England,[64] though a place like East Anglia, which had frequent contact with the Continent, was severely affected.[65] On a local level, however, there were great variations. A study of the Bishop of Worcester's estates reveal that, while his manors of Hartlebury and Hanbury had a mortality of only 19 per cent, the manor of Aston lost as much as 80 per cent of its population.[66] The manor rolls are less useful for studying the demographic distribution of the mortality, since the rolls only record the heads of households, normally an adult male.[67] Here the IPMs show us that the most vulnerable to the disease were infants and the elderly.[68]

There seem to have been relatively few deaths from the Black Death at higher levels of society.[69] The only member of the royal family who can be said with any certainty to have died from the Black Death was in France at the time of her infection. Edward III's daughter Joan was residing in Bordeaux on her way to marry Pedro of Castile in the summer of 1348. When the plague broke out in her household she was moved to a small village nearby, but she could not avoid infection, and died there on 2 September.[70] It is possible that the popular religious author Richard Rolle, who died on 30 September 1349, was another victim of the Black Death.[71] The English philosopher William of Ockham has been mentioned as a plague victim.[72] This, however, is an impossibility. Ockham was living in Munich at the time of his death, on 10 April 1347, two years before the Black Death reached that city.[73]

Consequences

Economic, social and political effects

Among the most immediate consequences of the Black Death in England was a shortage of farm labour, and a corresponding rise in wages. The medieval world-view was unable to interpret these changes in terms of socio-economic development, and it became common to blame degrading morals instead.[74] The landowning classes saw the rise in wage levels as a sign of social upheaval and insubordination, and reacted with coercion. In 1349, King Edward III passed the Ordinance of Labourers, fixing wages at pre-plague levels. The ordinance was reinforced by Parliament's passing of the Statute of Labourers in 1351.[75] The labour laws were enforced with ruthless determination over the following decades.[76]

 
Peasants' Revolt: rebel leader Wat Tyler is killed on the left, while the young Richard II pacifies the crowd on the right

These legislative measures proved largely inefficient at regulating the market, but the government's repressive measures to enforce them caused public resentment.[77] These conditions were contributing factors to the Peasants' Revolt in 1381. The revolt started in Kent and Essex in late May, and once the rebels reached London they burnt down John of Gaunt's Savoy Palace, and killed both the Chancellor and the Treasurer. They then demanded the complete abolition of serfdom, and were not pacified until the young King Richard II personally intervened.[78] The rebellion was eventually suppressed, but the social changes it promoted were already irreversible. By around 1400 serfdom was virtually extinct in England, replaced by the form of tenure called copyhold.[79]

It is conspicuous how well the English government handled the crisis of the mid-fourteenth century, without descending into chaos and total collapse in the manner of the Valois government of France.[80] To a large extent this was the accomplishment of administrators such as Treasurer William de Shareshull and Chief Justice William Edington, whose highly competent leadership guided the governance of the nation through the crisis.[80] The plague's greatest effect on the government was probably in the field of war, where no major campaigns were launched in France until 1355.[81]

Another notable consequence of the Black Death was the raising of the real wage of England (due to the shortage of labour as a result of the reduction in population), a trait shared across Western Europe, which in general led to a real wage in 1450 that was unmatched in most countries until the 19th or 20th century.[82] The higher wages for workers combined with sinking prices on grain products led to a problematic economic situation for the gentry. As a result, they started to show an increased interest for offices like justice of the peace, sheriff and member of parliament. The gentry took advantage of their new positions and a more systematic corruption than before spread. A result of this was that the gentry as a group became highly disliked by commoners.[83]

Religious and cultural consequences

The omnipresence of death also inspired greater piety in the upper classes, which can be seen in the fact that three Cambridge colleges were founded during or shortly after the Black Death.[84] England did not experience the same trend of roving bands of flagellants, common on the continent.[85] Neither were there any pogroms against the Jews, since the Jews had been expelled by Edward I in 1290.[85]

The high rate of mortality among the clergy naturally led to a shortage of priests in many parts of the country.[71] The clergy were seen to have an elevated status among ordinary people and this was partly due to their purported closeness with God, being his envoys on earth. However, as the church itself had given the cause of the Black Death to be the impropriety of the behaviour of men, the higher death rate among the clergy led the people to lose faith in the Church as an institution—it had proved as ineffectual against the horror of Y. pestis as every other medieval institution. The corruption within the Catholic priesthood also angered the English people. Many priests abandoned the terrified people. Others sought benefits from the rich families who needed burials. The dissatisfaction led to anti-clericalism and the rise of John Wycliffe, an English priest. His ideas paved a path for the Christian reformation in England. Some people didn't lose their Christian faith, if anything it was renewed; they began to long for a more personal relationship with God—around the time after the Black Death many chantries (private chapels) began to spread in use from not just the nobility, but to among the well-to-do.[86] This change in the power of the papacy in England is demonstrated by the statutes of Praemunire.

The Black Death also affected arts and culture significantly. It was inevitable that a catastrophe of such proportions would affect some of the greater building projects, as the amount of available labour fell sharply. The building of the cathedrals of Ely and Exeter was temporarily halted in the years immediately following the first outbreak of the plague.[87] The shortage of labour also helped advance the transition from the Decorated style of building to the less elaborate Perpendicular style.[88] The Black Death may also have promoted the use of vernacular English, as the number of teachers proficient in French dwindled, contributing to the late-14th-century flowering of English literature, represented by writers such as Geoffrey Chaucer and John Gower.[89]

Recurrences

 
In his diaries, Samuel Pepys gave a vivid description of the Great Plague of London; one of the last outbreaks of the second pandemic.

The Black Death was the first occurrence of the second pandemic,[90] which continued to strike England and the rest of Europe more or less regularly until the 18th century. The first serious recurrence in England came in the years 1361−62. Little is known about the death rates caused by these later outbreaks,[91] but the so-called pestis secunda may have had a mortality of around 20 per cent.[92] Genetic analysis performed on remains recovered from the abbey of St. Mary's Graces dating between 1353 and 1364 found the pPCP1 plasmid, a plasmid only found in Yersinia pestis and not the related environmental agent Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, revealing that this outbreak was also caused by Yersinia pestis just as the initial outbreak had been.[93][94][95] This epidemic was also particularly devastating for the population's ability to recover, since it disproportionately affected infants and young men.[96] This was also the case with the next occurrence, in 1369, where the death rate was around 10−15 per cent.[92]

Over the following decades the plague would return—on a national or a regional level—at intervals of five to 12 years, with gradually dwindling death tolls. Then, in the decades from 1430 to 1480, the disease returned in force. An outbreak in 1471 took as much as 10–15 per cent of the population, while the death rate of the plague of 1479–80 could have been as high as 20 per cent.[92] From that point outbreaks became fewer and more manageable, due largely to conscious efforts by central and local governments—from the late 15th century onward—to curtail the disease.[97] This included quarantines on people and goods coming from infected places, bans on public gatherings (such as fairs), enforced household quarantine for the infected (known as 'locking up') and quarantines on ships and crews coming from ports where Plague outbreaks had occurred.[98] From the early seventeenth century there was also greater use of quarantine facilities, called pesthouses, in preference to household quarantine. Some of these, such as the Forlorn Hope Pesthouse established by Bristol in 1665–6, appear to have been proper quarantine hospitals, staffed by doctors.[99] The establishment of such a hospital may help to explain why the death rate in Bristol in the 1665–66 outbreak was "only" c.0.6 percent.[100] This was much lower than the mortality rate of 10–20 percent witnessed in Bristol's Plague epidemics of 1565, 1575, 1603–04 and 1645.[101] The Great Plague of 1665–66 was the last major outbreak in England. It is best known for the famous Great Plague of London, which killed 100,000 people (20 per cent of the population) in the capital.[102] Other places hit hard included Eyam in Derbyshire, Derby itself and Norwich.[103]

See also

References

  1. ^ The Black Death, 1347, George Deaux, Weybright and Talley, New York, 1969, p. 117
  2. ^ Prestwich 2005, pp. 531–32
  3. ^ Smith, Richard M. (1991). "Demographic developments in rural England, 1300–1348: a survey". In B.M.S. Campbell (ed.). Before the Black Death: Studies in The "Crisis" of the Early Fourteenth Century. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 0-7190-3208-3.
    Benedictow 2004, p. 123
  4. ^ Harvey, Barbara F. (1991). "Introduction: The "Crisis" of the Early Fourteenth Century". In B.M.S. Campbell (ed.). Before the Black Death: Studies in The "Crisis" of the Early Fourteenth Century. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 1–24. ISBN 0-7190-3208-3.
  5. ^ a b Ziegler 2003, p. 119
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  13. ^ "death, n.". Oxford Dictionary of English. Retrieved 6 January 2009.
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    Hatcher 2008, pp. 139–40
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    Hatcher 2008, p. 47
  22. ^ Ziegler 2003, pp. 17, 40
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  24. ^ Gransden, Antonia (1957). "A Fourteenth-Century Chronicle from the Grey Friars at Lynn". English Historical Review. lxxii: 274. doi:10.1093/ehr/lxxii.cclxxxiii.270. Translation: Benedictow 2004, p. 127
  25. ^ https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/middle_ages/black_02.shtml BBC British History – Middle Ages – Black Death Arrival
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    Hatcher 2008, p. 75
  28. ^ Benedictow 2004, p. 127
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  44. ^ Eminent Physician, 1721, p. 19
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  59. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 August 2016. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
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  84. ^ The three were Gonville and Caius (1348), Trinity Hall (1350) and Corpus Christi (1352); Herlihy 1997, pp. 69–70
  85. ^ a b Harper-Bill 1996, p. 107
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  89. ^ Ziegler 2003, p. 253
  90. ^ The first was the Plague of Justinian that affected the Byzantine Empire in the sixth to eight centuries AD, while the third pandemic—active from the mid-nineteenth to mid-twentieth century—had its greatest effect on China and India;Benedictow 2004, pp. 35–44
  91. ^ Bolton 1996, p. 27
  92. ^ a b c Gottfried 1983, p. 131
  93. ^ Barnie Sloane's The Black Death in London, pgs 136-140.
  94. ^ Bos, Kirsten. "A Draft Genome of Yersinia pestis from Victims of the Black Death", Nature.
  95. ^ Bos, Kirsten. "Eighteenth Century Yersinia pestis Genomes Reveal the Long-Term Persistence of a Historical Plague Focus", eLife.
  96. ^ Bolton 1996, p. 37
  97. ^ Ormrod 1996, p. 147
  98. ^ Paul Slack, "The response to plague in early modern England: public policies and their consequences" in J. Walter & R. Schofield (eds.), Famine, Disease and the Social Order in Early Modern Society (Cambridge University Press, 1989), pp. 167–88.
  99. ^ Alex Beard (ed.), Documents Relating to the Great Plague of 1665–1666 in Bristol (Bristol Record Society electronic publication, September 2021)
  100. ^ Beard, pp. 1–2.
  101. ^ Paul Slack, 'The Local Incidence of Epidemic Disease: the Case of Bristol 1540–1650' in Slack, Paul (ed.), The Plague Reconsidered: A new look at its origins and effects in 16th and l7th Century England (Local Population Studies Supplement, Cambridge, 1977).
  102. ^ Ziegler 2003, p. 25
  103. ^ "Fighting the Plague in Tudor Norwich", 1 August 2020 (Norwich Record Office)

Sources

  • Benedictow, Ole J. (2004). The Black Death 1346–1353: The Complete History. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-943-5.
  • Bolton, Jim (1996). "'The world upside down': plague as an agent of economic and social change". In Mark Ormrod & P.G. Lindley (ed.). The Black Death in England. Stamford: Paul Watkins. pp. 17–78. ISBN 1-871615-56-9.
  • Deaux, George (1969). The Black Death, 1347. London: Hamilton. ISBN 978-0679400110.
  • Goldberg, Jeremy (1996). "Introduction". In Mark Ormrod & P.G. Lindley (ed.). The Black Death in England. Stamford: Paul Watkins. pp. 1–15. ISBN 1-871615-56-9.
  • Gottfried, Robert S. (1983). The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe. London: Hale. ISBN 0-7090-1299-3.
  • Harper-Bill, Christopher (1996). "The English church and English religion after the Black Death". In Mark Ormrod & P.G. Lindley (ed.). The Black Death in England. Stamford: Paul Watkins. pp. 79–123. ISBN 1-871615-56-9.
  • Hatcher, John (1977). Plague, Population and the English Economy, 1348–1530. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-21293-2.
  • Hatcher, John (1994). "England in the aftermath of the Black Death". Past & Present. cxliv: 3–35. doi:10.1093/past/144.1.3.
  • Hatcher, John (2008). The Black Death: An Intimate History. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-84475-4.
  • Herlihy, David (1997). The Black Death and the transformation of the West. Cambridge, Mass.; London: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-7509-3202-3.
  • Hilton, Rodney; Dyer, Christopher (2003). Bond Men Made Free: Medieval Peasant Movements and the English Rising of 1381 (2nd ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-31614-6.
  • Horrox, Rosemary (1994). The Black Death. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-3497-3.
  • Lewis, Carenza (June 2016). "Disaster recovery: new archaeological evidence for the long-term impact of the "calamitous" fourteenth century". Antiquity. 90 (351): 777–797. doi:10.15184/aqy.2016.69. S2CID 164178697.
  • Lindley, Phillip (1996). "The Black Death and English art: a debate and some assumptions". In Mark Ormrod & P.G. Lindley (ed.). The Black Death in England. Stamford: Paul Watkins. pp. 124–46. ISBN 1-871615-56-9.
  • Ormrod, Mark (1986). "The English government and the Black Death of 1348–49". In Mark Ormrod (ed.). England in the Fourteenth Century. Woodbridge: Boydell. pp. 175–88. ISBN 0-85115-448-4.
  • Ormrod, Mark; Lindley, P.G., eds. (1996). The Black Death in England. Stamford: Paul Watkins. ISBN 1-871615-56-9.
  • Ormrod, Mark (1996). "The politics of pestilence: government in England after the Black Death". In Mark Ormrod & P.G. Lindley (ed.). The Black Death in England. Stamford: Paul Watkins. pp. 147–81. ISBN 1-871615-56-9.
  • Ormrod, Mark (2000). "England: Edward II and Edward III". In Jones, Michael (ed.). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume 6, c.1300–c.1415. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-13905574-1.
  • Prestwich, M.C. (2005). Plantagenet England: 1225–1360. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-822844-9.
  • Rasmussen, S (2015). "Early divergent strains of Yersinia pestis in Eurasia 5,000 years ago". Cell. 163 (3): 571–82. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2015.10.009. PMC 4644222. PMID 26496604.
  • Russell, Josias Cox (1948). British Medieval Population. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
  • Ziegler, Philip (2003). The Black Death (News ed.). Sutton: Sutton Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0-7509-3202-3.

Further reading

  • Willmott, Hugh; Townend, Peter; Mahoney Swales, Diana; Poinar, Hendrik; Eaton, Katherine; Klunk, Jennifer (February 2020). "A Black Death mass grave at Thornton Abbey: the discovery and examination of a fourteenth-century rural catastrophe". Antiquity. 94 (373): 179–196. doi:10.15184/aqy.2019.213.  
  • Doomsday Book by Connie Willis, a science fiction novel, where the protagonist by accident travels back in time to the year 1348 and is confronted with the progress of the Black Death in southern England.

black, death, england, black, death, bubonic, plague, pandemic, which, reached, england, june, 1348, first, most, severe, manifestation, second, pandemic, caused, yersinia, pestis, bacteria, term, black, death, used, until, late, 17th, century, originating, as. The Black Death was a bubonic plague pandemic which reached England in June 1348 It was the first and most severe manifestation of the second pandemic caused by Yersinia pestis bacteria The term Black Death was not used until the late 17th century Originating in Asia it spread west along the trade routes across Europe and arrived on the British Isles from the English province of Gascony The plague was spread by flea infected rats as well as individuals who had been infected on the continent Rats were the reservoir hosts of the Y pestis bacteria and the Oriental rat flea was the primary vector The first known case in England was a seaman who arrived at Weymouth Dorset from Gascony in June 1348 1 By autumn the plague had reached London and by summer 1349 it covered the entire country before dying down by December Low estimates of mortality in the early twentieth century have been revised upwards due to re examination of data and new information and a figure of 40 60 percent of the population is widely accepted The most immediate consequence was a halt to the campaigns of the Hundred Years War In the long term the decrease in population caused a shortage of labour with subsequent rise in wages resisted by the landowners which caused deep resentment among the lower classes The Peasants Revolt of 1381 was largely a result of this resentment and even though the rebellion was suppressed in the long term serfdom was ended in England The Black Death also affected artistic and cultural efforts and may have helped advance the use of the vernacular In 1361 62 the plague returned to England this time causing the death of around 20 per cent of the population After this the plague continued to return intermittently throughout the 14th and 15th centuries in local or national outbreaks From this point on its effect became less severe and one of the last outbreaks of the plague in England was the Great Plague of London in 1665 1666 Contents 1 Background 1 1 England in the mid 14th century 1 2 The Black Death 2 Progress of the plague 3 Medical practice 4 Victims 4 1 Death toll 4 1 1 Impact of the Black Death 1349 4 2 Social distribution 5 Consequences 5 1 Economic social and political effects 5 2 Religious and cultural consequences 6 Recurrences 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further readingBackground EditEngland in the mid 14th century Edit The Battle of Crecy established England as a military power It is impossible to establish with any certainty the exact number of inhabitants in England at the eve of the Black Death and estimates range from 3 to 7 million 2 The number is probably in the higher end and an estimate of around 6 million inhabitants seems likely 3 Earlier demographic crises in particular the Great Famine of 1315 1317 had resulted in great numbers of deaths but there is no evidence of any significant decrease in the population prior to 1348 4 England was still a predominantly rural and agrarian society close to 90 per cent of the population lived in the countryside 5 Of the major cities London was in a class of its own with perhaps as many as 70 000 inhabitants 6 Further down the scale were Norwich with around 12 000 people and York with around 10 000 5 The main export and the source of the nation s wealth was wool Until the middle of the century the export had consisted primarily of raw wool to cloth makers in Flanders Gradually though the technology for cloth making used on the Continent was appropriated by English manufacturers who started an export of cloths around mid century that would boom over the following decades 7 Politically the kingdom was evolving into a major European power through the youthful and energetic kingship of Edward III 8 In 1346 the English had won a decisive battle over the Scots at the Battle of Neville s Cross 9 and it seemed that Edward III would realise his grandfather Edward I s ambition of bringing the Scots under the suzerainty of the English crown 10 The English were also experiencing military success on the continent Less than two months before the Battle of Neville s Cross a numerically inferior English army led by the king himself won a spectacular victory over the French royal forces at the Battle of Crecy 11 The victory was immediately followed by Edward laying siege to the port city of Calais When the city fell the next year this provided the English with a strategically important enclave that would remain in their possession for over two centuries 12 The Black Death Edit Main article Black Death The migration of the Black Death across Europe The term Black Death which refers to the first and most serious outbreak of the second pandemic was not used by contemporaries who preferred such names as the Great Pestilence or the Great Mortality 13 It was not until the 17th century that the term under which we know the outbreak today became common probably derived from Scandinavian languages 14 It is generally agreed today that the disease in question was plague caused by Yersinia pestis bacteria 15 These bacteria are carried by fleas which can be transferred to humans through contact with rats Flea bites carry the disease into the lymphatic system through which it makes its way to the lymph nodes Here the bacteria multiply and form swellings called buboes from which the term bubonic plague is derived 16 After three or four days the bacteria enter the bloodstream and infect organs such as the spleen and the lungs The patient will then normally die after a few days 17 A different strain of the disease is pneumonic plague where the bacteria become airborne and enter directly into the patient s lungs This strain is far more virulent as it spreads directly from person to person These types of infection probably both played a significant part in the Black Death while a third strain was more rare This is the septicaemic plague where the flea bite carries the bacteria directly into the blood stream and death occurs very rapidly 18 A study reported in 2011 of skeletons exhumed from the Black Death cemetery in East Smithfield London found Yersinia pestis DNA An archaeological dig in the vicinity of Thornton Abbey in Lincolnshire was reported in the science section of The Guardian for 30 November 2016 not only confirming evidence of the Y pestis DNA in the human remains exhumed there but also dating the remains to mid 1349 Genotyping showed that it was at that time a newly evolved strain ancestor of all modern strains and proved the Black Death was bubonic plague Modern medical knowledge suggests that because it was a new strain the human immune system would have had little or no defence against it helping to explain the plague s virulence and high death rates 19 The Black Death seems to have originated in Central Asia where the Y pestis bacterium is endemic in the rodent population It is unknown exactly what caused the outbreak but a series of natural occurrences likely brought humans into contact with the infected rodents 20 The epidemic reached Constantinople in the late spring of 1347 through Genoese merchants trading in the Black Sea 21 From here it reached Sicily in October that same year and by early 1348 it had spread over the entire Italian mainland 22 It spread rapidly through France and had reached as far north as Paris by June 1348 Moving simultaneously westward it arrived in the English province of Gascony around the same time 23 Progress of the plague EditIn this year in Melcombe in the county of Dorset a little before the Feast of St John the Baptist two ships one of them from Bristol came alongside One of the sailors had brought with him from Gascony the seeds of the terrible pestilence and through him the men of the town of Melcombe were the first in England to be infected Grey Friars Chronicle 24 According to the chronicle of the grey friars at King s Lynn the plague arrived by ship from Gascony to Melcombe in Dorset today normally referred to as Weymouth shortly before the Feast of St John the Baptist on 24 June 1348 25 Other sources mention different points of arrival including Bristol and Southampton 26 Though the plague might have arrived independently at Bristol at a later point the Grey Friars Chronicle is considered the most authoritative account 27 If it is assumed that the chronicle reports the first outbreak of the plague rather than its actual arrival then the arrival most likely happened around 8 May 28 From Weymouth the disease spread rapidly across the south west The first major city to be struck was Bristol 29 The disease reached London in the autumn of 1348 before most of the surrounding countryside This had certainly happened by November though according to some accounts as early as 29 September 30 Arrival in London happened by three principal roads overland from Weymouth through Salisbury and Winchester overland from Gloucester and along the coast by ship 31 The full effect of the plague was felt in the capital early the next year 32 Conditions in London were ideal for the plague the streets were narrow and flowing with sewage and houses were overcrowded and poorly ventilated 33 By March 1349 the disease was spreading haphazardly across all of southern England 34 During the first half of 1349 the Black Death spread northwards A second front opened up when the plague arrived by ship at the Humber after which it spread both south and north 35 In May it reached York and during the summer months of June July and August it ravaged the north 36 Certain northern counties like Durham and Cumberland had been the victim of violent incursions from the Scots and were therefore left particularly vulnerable to the devastations of the plague 37 Pestilence is less virulent during the winter months and spreads less rapidly 38 The Black Death in England had survived the winter of 1348 49 but during the following winter it gave in and by December 1349 conditions were returning to relative normality 39 It had taken the disease approximately 500 days to traverse the entire country 40 Medical practice EditVarious methods were used including sweating bloodletting forced vomiting and urinating to treat patients infected with the plague 41 Several symptoms of the illness included blotches hardening of the glands under the groin and underarms and dementia 42 Within the initial phase of the disease bloodletting was performed on the same side of where the physical manifestations of the buboes or risings appeared For instance if a rising appeared on the right side of the groin the physician would bleed a vein in the ankle on the same side 43 In the case of sweating it was achieved with such medicines as Mithridate Venice Treacle Matthiolus Bezoar Water Serpentary Roots and Electuarium de Ovo 44 Sweating was used when measures were desperate if a patient had tokens a severe version of risings the physician would wrap the naked patient in a blanket drenched in cold water This measure was only performed while the patient still had natural heat in his system The desired effect was to make the patient sweat violently and thus purge all corruption from the blood which was caused by the disease 45 Another practice was the use of pigeons when treating swellings Swellings which were white in appearance and deep were unlikely to break and were anointed with Oil of Lillies or Camomil 46 Once the swelling rose to a head and was red in appearance and not deep in the flesh it was broken with the use of a feather from a young pigeon s tail The feather s fundament was held to the swelling and would draw out the venom However if the swelling dropped and became black in appearance the physician had to be cautious when drawing the cold from the swelling If it was too late to prevent the physician would take the young pigeon cut it open from breast to back break it open and apply the pigeon while still alive over the cold swelling The cupping therapy was an alternative method which was heated and then placed over the swellings Once the sore was broken the physician would apply Mellilot Plaister with Linimentum Arcei and heal the sore with digence 47 Victims EditDeath toll Edit Although historical records for England were more extensive than those of any other European country 48 it is still extremely difficult to establish the death toll with any degree of certainty Difficulties involve uncertainty about the size of the total population as described above but also issues regarding the proportion of the population that died from the plague Contemporary accounts are often grossly inflated stating numbers as high as 90 per cent 49 Modern historians give estimates of death rates ranging from around 25 per cent to more than 60 per cent of the total population The pioneering work in the field was made by Josiah William Russell in his 1948 British Medieval Population Russell looked at inquisitions post mortem IPMs taken by the crown to assess the wealth of the greatest landowners after their death to assess the mortality caused by the Black Death and from this arrived at an estimate of 23 6 per cent of the entire population 50 He also looked at episcopal registers for the death toll among the clergy where the result was between 30 and 40 per cent 51 Russell believed the clergy was at particular risk of contagion and eventually concluded with a low mortality level of only 20 per cent 52 Several of Russell s assumptions have been challenged and the tendency since has been to adjust the assessment upwards 53 Philip Ziegler in 1969 estimated the death rate to be at around one third of the population 54 Jeremy Goldberg in 1996 believed a number closer to 45 per cent would be more realistic 55 A 2004 study by Ole Jorgen Benedictow suggests the exceptionally high mortality level of 62 5 per cent 56 Assuming a population of 6 million this estimate would correspond to 3 750 000 deaths Such a high percentage would place England above the average that Benedictow estimates for Western Europe as a whole of 60 per cent 56 A death rate at such a high level has not been universally accepted in the historical community 57 In 2016 Carenza Lewis reported the results of a new method of assessing the death toll She argued that pottery before and after the Black Death is datable because there was a change at that time from the high medieval to the late medieval style and that counts of pottery of each type therefore provide a useful proxy for long term changes in population She and her colleagues analysed pottery sherds from test pits in more than 50 continuously occupied rural settlements in eastern England and found a decline in the number of pottery producing pits of 45 per cent Norfolk had the greatest drop of 65 per cent while there was no drop in 10 per cent of settlements mostly commercial centres 58 Impact of the Black Death 1349 Edit Archbishop Zouche of York issued a warning throughout the diocese in July 1348 when the epidemic was raging further south of great mortalities pestilences and infections of the air The Great Mortality as it was then known entered Yorkshire around February 1349 and quickly spread through the diocese The clergy were on the front line of the disease bringing comfort to the dying hearing final confessions and organising burials This almost by necessity put them at a greater risk of infection Estimates suggest that the death rate of clergy in some parts of the archdiocese could have been as high as 48 per cent This is reflected in the Ordination Register which shows a massive rise in ordained clergy over the period some being recruited before the arrival of plague in a clerical recruitment drive but many once plague had arrived replacing those who had been killed In 1346 111 priests and 337 acolytes were recruited In 1349 299 priests and 683 acolytes are named with 166 priests being ordained in one session alone in February 1350 59 Social distribution Edit Russell had trusted the IPMs to give a true picture of the national average because he assumed death rates to be relatively equal across the social spectrum 60 This assumption has been proven wrong and studies of peasant plague mortality from manor rolls have returned much higher rates This could be a consequence of the elite s ability to avoid infection by escaping plague infected areas It could also result from lower post infection mortality among those more affluent due to better access to care and nursing 61 If so this would also mean that the mortality rates for the clergy who were normally better off than the general population were no higher than the average 62 destructive Death who seizes young and old alike sparing no one and reducing rich and poor to the same level has lamentably snatched from both of us our dearest daughter whom we loved best of all as her virtues demanded Edward III in a letter to King Alfonso of Castile 63 The manorial records offer a good opportunity to study the geographical distribution of the plague Its effect seems to have been about the same all over England 64 though a place like East Anglia which had frequent contact with the Continent was severely affected 65 On a local level however there were great variations A study of the Bishop of Worcester s estates reveal that while his manors of Hartlebury and Hanbury had a mortality of only 19 per cent the manor of Aston lost as much as 80 per cent of its population 66 The manor rolls are less useful for studying the demographic distribution of the mortality since the rolls only record the heads of households normally an adult male 67 Here the IPMs show us that the most vulnerable to the disease were infants and the elderly 68 There seem to have been relatively few deaths from the Black Death at higher levels of society 69 The only member of the royal family who can be said with any certainty to have died from the Black Death was in France at the time of her infection Edward III s daughter Joan was residing in Bordeaux on her way to marry Pedro of Castile in the summer of 1348 When the plague broke out in her household she was moved to a small village nearby but she could not avoid infection and died there on 2 September 70 It is possible that the popular religious author Richard Rolle who died on 30 September 1349 was another victim of the Black Death 71 The English philosopher William of Ockham has been mentioned as a plague victim 72 This however is an impossibility Ockham was living in Munich at the time of his death on 10 April 1347 two years before the Black Death reached that city 73 Consequences EditSee also Consequences of the Black Death Economic social and political effects Edit Among the most immediate consequences of the Black Death in England was a shortage of farm labour and a corresponding rise in wages The medieval world view was unable to interpret these changes in terms of socio economic development and it became common to blame degrading morals instead 74 The landowning classes saw the rise in wage levels as a sign of social upheaval and insubordination and reacted with coercion In 1349 King Edward III passed the Ordinance of Labourers fixing wages at pre plague levels The ordinance was reinforced by Parliament s passing of the Statute of Labourers in 1351 75 The labour laws were enforced with ruthless determination over the following decades 76 Peasants Revolt rebel leader Wat Tyler is killed on the left while the young Richard II pacifies the crowd on the right These legislative measures proved largely inefficient at regulating the market but the government s repressive measures to enforce them caused public resentment 77 These conditions were contributing factors to the Peasants Revolt in 1381 The revolt started in Kent and Essex in late May and once the rebels reached London they burnt down John of Gaunt s Savoy Palace and killed both the Chancellor and the Treasurer They then demanded the complete abolition of serfdom and were not pacified until the young King Richard II personally intervened 78 The rebellion was eventually suppressed but the social changes it promoted were already irreversible By around 1400 serfdom was virtually extinct in England replaced by the form of tenure called copyhold 79 It is conspicuous how well the English government handled the crisis of the mid fourteenth century without descending into chaos and total collapse in the manner of the Valois government of France 80 To a large extent this was the accomplishment of administrators such as Treasurer William de Shareshull and Chief Justice William Edington whose highly competent leadership guided the governance of the nation through the crisis 80 The plague s greatest effect on the government was probably in the field of war where no major campaigns were launched in France until 1355 81 Another notable consequence of the Black Death was the raising of the real wage of England due to the shortage of labour as a result of the reduction in population a trait shared across Western Europe which in general led to a real wage in 1450 that was unmatched in most countries until the 19th or 20th century 82 The higher wages for workers combined with sinking prices on grain products led to a problematic economic situation for the gentry As a result they started to show an increased interest for offices like justice of the peace sheriff and member of parliament The gentry took advantage of their new positions and a more systematic corruption than before spread A result of this was that the gentry as a group became highly disliked by commoners 83 Religious and cultural consequences Edit The omnipresence of death also inspired greater piety in the upper classes which can be seen in the fact that three Cambridge colleges were founded during or shortly after the Black Death 84 England did not experience the same trend of roving bands of flagellants common on the continent 85 Neither were there any pogroms against the Jews since the Jews had been expelled by Edward I in 1290 85 The high rate of mortality among the clergy naturally led to a shortage of priests in many parts of the country 71 The clergy were seen to have an elevated status among ordinary people and this was partly due to their purported closeness with God being his envoys on earth However as the church itself had given the cause of the Black Death to be the impropriety of the behaviour of men the higher death rate among the clergy led the people to lose faith in the Church as an institution it had proved as ineffectual against the horror of Y pestis as every other medieval institution The corruption within the Catholic priesthood also angered the English people Many priests abandoned the terrified people Others sought benefits from the rich families who needed burials The dissatisfaction led to anti clericalism and the rise of John Wycliffe an English priest His ideas paved a path for the Christian reformation in England Some people didn t lose their Christian faith if anything it was renewed they began to long for a more personal relationship with God around the time after the Black Death many chantries private chapels began to spread in use from not just the nobility but to among the well to do 86 This change in the power of the papacy in England is demonstrated by the statutes of Praemunire The Black Death also affected arts and culture significantly It was inevitable that a catastrophe of such proportions would affect some of the greater building projects as the amount of available labour fell sharply The building of the cathedrals of Ely and Exeter was temporarily halted in the years immediately following the first outbreak of the plague 87 The shortage of labour also helped advance the transition from the Decorated style of building to the less elaborate Perpendicular style 88 The Black Death may also have promoted the use of vernacular English as the number of teachers proficient in French dwindled contributing to the late 14th century flowering of English literature represented by writers such as Geoffrey Chaucer and John Gower 89 Recurrences Edit In his diaries Samuel Pepys gave a vivid description of the Great Plague of London one of the last outbreaks of the second pandemic The Black Death was the first occurrence of the second pandemic 90 which continued to strike England and the rest of Europe more or less regularly until the 18th century The first serious recurrence in England came in the years 1361 62 Little is known about the death rates caused by these later outbreaks 91 but the so called pestis secunda may have had a mortality of around 20 per cent 92 Genetic analysis performed on remains recovered from the abbey of St Mary s Graces dating between 1353 and 1364 found the pPCP1 plasmid a plasmid only found in Yersinia pestis and not the related environmental agent Yersinia pseudotuberculosis revealing that this outbreak was also caused by Yersinia pestis just as the initial outbreak had been 93 94 95 This epidemic was also particularly devastating for the population s ability to recover since it disproportionately affected infants and young men 96 This was also the case with the next occurrence in 1369 where the death rate was around 10 15 per cent 92 Over the following decades the plague would return on a national or a regional level at intervals of five to 12 years with gradually dwindling death tolls Then in the decades from 1430 to 1480 the disease returned in force An outbreak in 1471 took as much as 10 15 per cent of the population while the death rate of the plague of 1479 80 could have been as high as 20 per cent 92 From that point outbreaks became fewer and more manageable due largely to conscious efforts by central and local governments from the late 15th century onward to curtail the disease 97 This included quarantines on people and goods coming from infected places bans on public gatherings such as fairs enforced household quarantine for the infected known as locking up and quarantines on ships and crews coming from ports where Plague outbreaks had occurred 98 From the early seventeenth century there was also greater use of quarantine facilities called pesthouses in preference to household quarantine Some of these such as the Forlorn Hope Pesthouse established by Bristol in 1665 6 appear to have been proper quarantine hospitals staffed by doctors 99 The establishment of such a hospital may help to explain why the death rate in Bristol in the 1665 66 outbreak was only c 0 6 percent 100 This was much lower than the mortality rate of 10 20 percent witnessed in Bristol s Plague epidemics of 1565 1575 1603 04 and 1645 101 The Great Plague of 1665 66 was the last major outbreak in England It is best known for the famous Great Plague of London which killed 100 000 people 20 per cent of the population in the capital 102 Other places hit hard included Eyam in Derbyshire Derby itself and Norwich 103 See also EditGlobalization and disease Abandoned village Population decline Medieval demography Crisis of the Late Middle Ages Popular revolts in late medieval Europe List of epidemicsReferences Edit The Black Death 1347 George Deaux Weybright and Talley New York 1969 p 117 Prestwich 2005 pp 531 32 Smith Richard M 1991 Demographic developments in rural England 1300 1348 a survey In B M S Campbell ed Before the Black Death Studies in The Crisis of the Early Fourteenth Century Manchester Manchester University Press pp 48 49 ISBN 0 7190 3208 3 Benedictow 2004 p 123 Harvey Barbara F 1991 Introduction The Crisis of the Early Fourteenth Century In B M S Campbell ed Before the Black Death Studies in The Crisis of the Early Fourteenth Century Manchester Manchester University Press pp 1 24 ISBN 0 7190 3208 3 a b Ziegler 2003 p 119 Prestwich 2005 p 473 Cipolla Carlo M 1993 Before the Industrial Revolution European Society and Economy 1000 1700 3rd ed London Routledge pp 260 61 ISBN 0 415 09005 9 Deaux 1969 p 117 Ormrod 2000 pp 276 77 Prestwich 2005 p 245 Prestwich 2005 pp 317 19 Ormrod 2000 p 279 death n Oxford Dictionary of English Retrieved 6 January 2009 Ziegler 2003 pp 17 18 Horrox 1994 p 5 Benedictow 2004 p 25 Horrox 1994 pp 5 6 Hatcher 2008 pp 139 40 Horrox 1994 p 8 Lewis 2016 p 778 Ziegler 2003 p 13 Horrox 1994 p 9 Hatcher 2008 p 47 Ziegler 2003 pp 17 40 Horrox 1994 pp 9 10 Gransden Antonia 1957 A Fourteenth Century Chronicle from the Grey Friars at Lynn English Historical Review lxxii 274 doi 10 1093 ehr lxxii cclxxxiii 270 Translation Benedictow 2004 p 127 https www bbc co uk history british middle ages black 02 shtml BBC British History Middle Ages Black Death Arrival Ziegler 2003 pp 119 20 Benedictow 2004 p 127 Hatcher 2008 p 75 Benedictow 2004 p 127 Ziegler 2003 pp 134 35 Deaux 1969 p 122 Benedictow 2004 p 134 Ziegler 2003 p 156 Deaux 1969 pp 122 23 Ziegler 2003 p 137 Benedictow 2004 p 140 Ziegler 2003 p 182 Ziegler 2003 pp 184 86 Deaux 1969 p 140 Benedictow 2004 p 132 Ziegler 2003 p 129 Benedictow 2004 p 142 Eminent Physician Treatise of the pestilence with its pre vision pro vision and pre vention and the doctor s method of cure From the manuscript of an eminent physician who practis d in the last great plague in London London printed for J Roberts 1721 p 19 Winston Holt Rinehart and Hrw May 2002 Holt Literature and Language Arts ISBN 0030564980 Eminent Physician Treatise of the pestilence with its pre vision pro vision and pre vention and the doctor s method of cure From the manuscript of an eminent physician who practis d in the last great plague in London London printed for J Roberts 1721 p 18 Eminent Physician 1721 p 19 Eminent Physician 1721 pp 21 22 Eminent Physician 1721 p 20 Eminent Physician 1721 p 21 Ziegler 2003 p 129 Benedictow 2004 p 383 Ziegler 2003 p 227 Russell 1948 p 216 Russell 1948 pp 220 23 Russell 1948 p 367 Hatcher 1994 p 9 Ziegler 2003 p 230 Goldberg Jeremy 1996 Introduction In Mark Ormrod amp P G Lindley ed The Black Death in England Stamford Paul Watkins p 4 ISBN 1 871615 56 9 a b Benedictow 2004 p 383 Horrox Rosemary 2006 The Black Death 1346 1353 The Complete History review English Historical Review cxxi 197 99 doi 10 1093 ehr cej012 Lewis 2016 pp 77 97 Impact of the Black Death 1349 Archived from the original on 14 August 2016 Retrieved 23 July 2016 Benedictow 2004 p 343 Benedictow 2004 p 377 Benedictow 2004 pp 342 53 Horrox 1994 p 250 Horrox 1994 pp 235 36 Gottfried 1983 pp 65 66 Bolton 1996 p 23 Hatcher 2008 p 152 Russell 1948 pp 216 18 Prestwich 2005 p 546 Horrox 1994 p 246 a b Hatcher 2008 p 248 Deaux 1969 p 143 Courtenay W J 2004 Ockham William c 1287 1347 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20493 Hilton amp Dyer 2003 p 232 Hilton amp Dyer 2003 pp 152 53 Prestwich 2005 p 548 Ormrod 1996 p 156 Hatcher 1994 pp 206 247 Harriss Gerald 2005 Shaping the Nation England 1360 1461 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 447 48 ISBN 0 19 822816 3 Gottfried 1983 p 137 a b Ormrod 1986 pp 175 88 Prestwich 2005 p 550 Allen R C The Great divergence in European wages and prices from the middle ages to the First World War Explorations in Economic History 38 2001 pp 411 47 Harrison Dick 2000 Stora Doden in Swedish Stockholm Ordfront p 145 ISBN 91 7324 852 5 The three were Gonville and Caius 1348 Trinity Hall 1350 and Corpus Christi 1352 Herlihy 1997 pp 69 70 a b Harper Bill 1996 p 107 Kelly John 2006 The Great Mortality An Intimate History of the Black Death Harper Perennial p 384 ISBN 0 00 715070 9 Lindley 1996 p 143 Lindley 1996 pp 129 137 Ziegler 2003 p 253 The first was the Plague of Justinian that affected the Byzantine Empire in the sixth to eight centuries AD while the third pandemic active from the mid nineteenth to mid twentieth century had its greatest effect on China and India Benedictow 2004 pp 35 44 Bolton 1996 p 27 a b c Gottfried 1983 p 131 Barnie Sloane s The Black Death in London pgs 136 140 Bos Kirsten A Draft Genome of Yersinia pestis from Victims of the Black Death Nature Bos Kirsten Eighteenth Century Yersinia pestis Genomes Reveal the Long Term Persistence of a Historical Plague Focus eLife Bolton 1996 p 37 Ormrod 1996 p 147 Paul Slack The response to plague in early modern England public policies and their consequences in J Walter amp R Schofield eds Famine Disease and the Social Order in Early Modern Society Cambridge University Press 1989 pp 167 88 Alex Beard ed Documents Relating to the Great Plague of 1665 1666 in Bristol Bristol Record Society electronic publication September 2021 Beard pp 1 2 Paul Slack The Local Incidence of Epidemic Disease the Case of Bristol 1540 1650 in Slack Paul ed The Plague Reconsidered A new look at its origins and effects in 16th and l7th Century England Local Population Studies Supplement Cambridge 1977 Ziegler 2003 p 25 Fighting the Plague in Tudor Norwich 1 August 2020 Norwich Record Office Sources EditBenedictow Ole J 2004 The Black Death 1346 1353 The Complete History Woodbridge Boydell Press ISBN 0 85115 943 5 Bolton Jim 1996 The world upside down plague as an agent of economic and social change In Mark Ormrod amp P G Lindley ed The Black Death in England Stamford Paul Watkins pp 17 78 ISBN 1 871615 56 9 Deaux George 1969 The Black Death 1347 London Hamilton ISBN 978 0679400110 Goldberg Jeremy 1996 Introduction In Mark Ormrod amp P G Lindley ed The Black Death in England Stamford Paul Watkins pp 1 15 ISBN 1 871615 56 9 Gottfried Robert S 1983 The Black Death Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe London Hale ISBN 0 7090 1299 3 Harper Bill Christopher 1996 The English church and English religion after the Black Death In Mark Ormrod amp P G Lindley ed The Black Death in England Stamford Paul Watkins pp 79 123 ISBN 1 871615 56 9 Hatcher John 1977 Plague Population and the English Economy 1348 1530 London Macmillan ISBN 0 333 21293 2 Hatcher John 1994 England in the aftermath of the Black Death Past amp Present cxliv 3 35 doi 10 1093 past 144 1 3 Hatcher John 2008 The Black Death An Intimate History London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84475 4 Herlihy David 1997 The Black Death and the transformation of the West Cambridge Mass London Harvard University Press ISBN 0 7509 3202 3 Hilton Rodney Dyer Christopher 2003 Bond Men Made Free Medieval Peasant Movements and the English Rising of 1381 2nd ed London Routledge ISBN 0 415 31614 6 Horrox Rosemary 1994 The Black Death Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 3497 3 Lewis Carenza June 2016 Disaster recovery new archaeological evidence for the long term impact of the calamitous fourteenth century Antiquity 90 351 777 797 doi 10 15184 aqy 2016 69 S2CID 164178697 Lindley Phillip 1996 The Black Death and English art a debate and some assumptions In Mark Ormrod amp P G Lindley ed The Black Death in England Stamford Paul Watkins pp 124 46 ISBN 1 871615 56 9 Ormrod Mark 1986 The English government and the Black Death of 1348 49 In Mark Ormrod ed England in the Fourteenth Century Woodbridge Boydell pp 175 88 ISBN 0 85115 448 4 Ormrod Mark Lindley P G eds 1996 The Black Death in England Stamford Paul Watkins ISBN 1 871615 56 9 Ormrod Mark 1996 The politics of pestilence government in England after the Black Death In Mark Ormrod amp P G Lindley ed The Black Death in England Stamford Paul Watkins pp 147 81 ISBN 1 871615 56 9 Ormrod Mark 2000 England Edward II and Edward III In Jones Michael ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 6 c 1300 c 1415 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 13905574 1 Prestwich M C 2005 Plantagenet England 1225 1360 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 822844 9 Rasmussen S 2015 Early divergent strains of Yersinia pestis in Eurasia 5 000 years ago Cell 163 3 571 82 doi 10 1016 j cell 2015 10 009 PMC 4644222 PMID 26496604 Russell Josias Cox 1948 British Medieval Population Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press Ziegler Philip 2003 The Black Death News ed Sutton Sutton Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7509 3202 3 Further reading EditWillmott Hugh Townend Peter Mahoney Swales Diana Poinar Hendrik Eaton Katherine Klunk Jennifer February 2020 A Black Death mass grave at Thornton Abbey the discovery and examination of a fourteenth century rural catastrophe Antiquity 94 373 179 196 doi 10 15184 aqy 2019 213 Doomsday Book by Connie Willis a science fiction novel where the protagonist by accident travels back in time to the year 1348 and is confronted with the progress of the Black Death in southern England Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black Death in England amp oldid 1151799172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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