

The results from this study are consistent with previous findings suggesting that despite the devastating nature of the Black Death, the 14th-century disease had general patterns of selectivity that were similar to those associated with normal medieval mortality." The age patterns in the Black Death cemetery were similar to those from the non-epidemic mortality sample. The results indicate that the risk of mortality during the Black Death increased with adult age, and therefore that age had an effect on risk of death during the epidemic. Ages were estimated using the method of transition analysis, and age-specific mortality was evaluated using a hazards model. The age patterns from East Smithfield were compared to a sample of 207 individuals who died from non-epidemic causes of mortality. "Analyses were done using a sample of 337 individuals excavated from the East Smithfield cemetery in London, which contains only individuals who died during the Black Death in London in 1349–1350. I took one week and went away from the manuscripts themselves and offered statistical evidence of the Black Death to see if it compares with the changes in the manuscript. When the plague began to spread across Europe, that attitude quickly changed. According to Medrano-Cabral the "Medieval artist strove for realism churches and monasteries were covered in inscriptions, paintings and sculptures that portrayed biblical scenes or saints." Death in this time was not to be feared but rather revered as the natural passage between ones time on earth and their future in the afterlife. For this week, the idea that I wanted my readers to focus on and take away from my blog was that virtually of art before the peak of the Black Death was painted in this style. I felt that it's important and necessary to look at illustrated manuscripts before the Black Death to be able to compare it to manuscripts after that Black Death in order to see if a change in society was represented in these manuscripts. The second week of the blog I focused on art before the Black Death. The Feudal System depended upon class constructs death affected not only the poor but the rich as well thus hastening the decline of the system. One of the most important things to remember from the first week was that the plague caused much social unrest. The first week of this blog I gave a historical background of the Black Death and discussed how it spread, why it spread, and the societal changes that the spread caused.
Black death medieval manuscripts free#
Said in my previous week’s post, if you have any questions, feel free toĬontact me at any time and I will try to answer them to the best of my ability. Honestly, if I could go back to the beginning of the semester I would eitherĬhange my research question altogether or at least modify it to be more Read into many accounts from people representing the Church, but these two are

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The scholarly sources that I found and used, From my research, I had to rely on the use of non-scholarly sources,Īs there just isn't much to be found that really goes in depth with Ran into while researching this topic had to deal with finding reputable
