Book
Communities and Crisis
Bologna during the Black Death
-
Shona Kelly Wray
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2009
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About this book
Bologna is well known for its powerful university and notariate of the thirteenth century, but the fourteenth-century city is less studied. This work redresses the imbalance in scholarship by examining social and economic life at mid-fourteenth century, particularly during the epidemic of plague, the Black Death of 1348. Arguing against medieval chroniclers' accounts of massive social, political, and religious breakdown, this examination of the immediate experience of the epidemic, based on notarial records--including over a thousand testaments--demonstrates resilience during the crisis. The notarial record reveals the activities and decisions of large numbers of individuals and families in the city and provides a reconstruction of the behavior of clergy, medical practitioners, government and neighborhood officials, and notaries during the epidemic.
Author / Editor information
Shona Kelly Wray, Ph.D. (1999) in History, University of Colorado at Boulder, is Associate Professor of History at the University of Missouri--Kansas City. Her publications concern the experience of the Black Death and notarial culture in late medieval Bologna.
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
June 2, 2009
eBook ISBN:
9789047429784
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
300
eBook ISBN:
9789047429784
Keywords for this book
Black; Death; medieval; Bologna; notarial; culture; testaments; social; history; late; urban; Italy; family; inheritance
Audience(s) for this book
Those interested in the Black Death and medieval Italy: students; educated lay public; History instructors at survey, upper-division undergraduate, and graduate levels; specialists in the history of medicine, history of the family and inheritance, urban history of medieval Italy, the notariate.