During the sixteenth century, Italian scholars revised their conception of the field of history so that its purposes went beyond providing political and morally edifying narratives. These scholars contended that history must also account for culture and nature in an encyclopedic fashion. In the same years, numerous newly available texts from antiquity, the Byzantine empire, and the Middle Ages provided insight into the character of earlier outbreaks of plague. Italian physicians, embracing new visions of the field of history, the culture of humanism, and an inductivist epistemology, used these texts to argue that there were continuities among ancient, medieval, and Renaissance epidemics. They catalogued plague and formed historical c...
A vivid recreation of how the governors and governed of early seventeenth-century Florence confronte...
abstract: The essay conducts a wide review of the existing modern scholarship on plague, caused by Y...
The Cyprian Plague, named after Saint Cyprian of Carthage, occurred between 251-270 CE, adding str...
During the sixteenth century, Italian scholars revised their conception of the field of history so t...
From 1575 to 1578 much of northern Italy was struck by the plague. In Venice alone over 50,000 peopl...
Plague is a topic of enduring fascination. As each age faces the challenge of new epidemic diseases,...
This essay deals with plague and plagues in renaissance and early modern Europe over the longue duré...
Runner-up for the Griswold Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Historical ScholarshipThis meticulo...
Historians are obviously interested in epidemics and pandemics. As disruptions to societies’ ordinar...
Early modern Venice was economically wealthy, politically powerful and socially cosmopolitan; one si...
This thesis investigates how health officials sought to preserve or recover good health during plagu...
In 1521, Vienna experienced a plague outbreak. University-trained physicians,\ud also known as learn...
In their medical-historical review, the authors assess the evolution of bubonic plague epidemics: af...
The methods of preventing and controlling plagues depended heavily on contemporary understandings of...
The plague caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, provides one of the best historical examples of ...
A vivid recreation of how the governors and governed of early seventeenth-century Florence confronte...
abstract: The essay conducts a wide review of the existing modern scholarship on plague, caused by Y...
The Cyprian Plague, named after Saint Cyprian of Carthage, occurred between 251-270 CE, adding str...
During the sixteenth century, Italian scholars revised their conception of the field of history so t...
From 1575 to 1578 much of northern Italy was struck by the plague. In Venice alone over 50,000 peopl...
Plague is a topic of enduring fascination. As each age faces the challenge of new epidemic diseases,...
This essay deals with plague and plagues in renaissance and early modern Europe over the longue duré...
Runner-up for the Griswold Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Historical ScholarshipThis meticulo...
Historians are obviously interested in epidemics and pandemics. As disruptions to societies’ ordinar...
Early modern Venice was economically wealthy, politically powerful and socially cosmopolitan; one si...
This thesis investigates how health officials sought to preserve or recover good health during plagu...
In 1521, Vienna experienced a plague outbreak. University-trained physicians,\ud also known as learn...
In their medical-historical review, the authors assess the evolution of bubonic plague epidemics: af...
The methods of preventing and controlling plagues depended heavily on contemporary understandings of...
The plague caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, provides one of the best historical examples of ...
A vivid recreation of how the governors and governed of early seventeenth-century Florence confronte...
abstract: The essay conducts a wide review of the existing modern scholarship on plague, caused by Y...
The Cyprian Plague, named after Saint Cyprian of Carthage, occurred between 251-270 CE, adding str...