About This Book
A detailed medical-historical study of a devastating medieval pandemic, combining symptom descriptions and contemporary medical observations with analysis of proposed causes and mechanisms of transmission. It surveys the scale and geographic spread of mortality, examines social and moral responses—including popular movements, scapegoating, and changes in customs—and assesses medical practitioners’ treatments and professional conduct. Chapters interweave narrative, statistical reports, and medical theory, while appendices reproduce period documents such as penitential songs, trial records accusing minorities of poisoning wells, and early preventive and therapeutic advice, offering primary sources alongside interpretive commentary on the epidemic’s effects.
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