About This Book
The author offers a historical-medical examination of a fourteenth-century oriental plague characterized by buboes, septic lesions, rapid spread across continents, and high mortality, juxtaposed with the later phenomenon of contagious mass dancing and related ecstatic sectarian movements. Drawing on contemporary chronicles and clinical details, he reconstructs symptoms, course, and probable causes, and analyzes social and religious reactions — fear, superstition, flagellant processions, breakdowns of order — and consequences for public health and moral behavior. Methodologically, the study combines clinical description, source criticism, and cultural interpretation to show how epidemics shaped collective life and beliefs.
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