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In the Wake of the Plague: The Black Death and the World It Made Kindle Edition
Norman Cantor, the premier historian of the Middle Ages, draws together the most recent scientific discoveries and groundbreaking historical research to pierce the mist and tell the story of the Black Death afresh, as a gripping, intimate narrative.
In the Wake of the Plague presents a microcosmic view of the Plague in England (and on the continent), telling the stories of the men and women of the fourteenth century, from peasant to priest, and from merchant to king. Cantor introduces a fascinating cast of characters. We meet, among others, fifteen-year-old Princess Joan of England, on her way to Spain to marry a Castilian prince; Thomas of Birmingham, abbot of Halesowen, responsible for his abbey as a CEO is for his business in a desperate time; and the once-prominent landowner John le Strange, who sees the Black Death tear away his family's lands and then its very name as it washes, unchecked, over Europe in wave after wave.
Cantor argues that despite the devastation that made the Plague so terrifying, the disease that killed more than 40 percent of Europe's population had some beneficial results. The often literal demise of the old order meant that new, more scientific thinking increasingly prevailed where church dogma had once reigned supreme. In effect, the Black Death heralded an intellectual revolution. There was also an explosion of art: tapestries became popular as window protection against the supposedly airborne virus, and a great number of painters responded to the Plague. Finally, the Black Death marked an economic sea change: the onset of what Cantor refers to as turbocapitalism; the peasants who survived the Plague thrived, creating Europe's first class of independent farmers.
Here are those stories and others, in a tale of triumph coming out of the darkest horror, wrapped up in a scientific mystery that persists, in part, to this day. Cantor's portrait of the Black Death's world is pro-vocative and captivating. Not since Barbara Tuchman's A Distant Mirror have medieval men and women been brought so vividly to life. The greatest popularizer of the Middle Ages has written the period's most fascinating narrative.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSimon & Schuster
- Publication dateOctober 14, 2014
- File size15253 KB
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After giving an overview, Cantor describes various theories about the medical crisis, from contemporary fears of a Jewish conspiracy to poison the water (and the resulting atrocities against European Jews) to a growing belief among modern historians that both bubonic plague and anthrax caused the spiraling death rates. Cantor also details ways in which the Black Death changed history, at both the personal level (family lines dying out) and the political (the Plantagenet kings may well have been able to hold onto France had their resources not been so diminished).
Cantor veers from topic to topic, from dynastic worries to the Dance of Death, and from peasants' rights to Perpendicular Gothic. This makes for amusing reading, though those seeking an orderly narrative may be frustrated. He also seems overly concerned with rumors of homosexual behavior, and his attempt to link the savage method of Edward II's murder to a cooling in global weather is a bit farfetched.
Cantor wears his considerable scholarship lightly, but includes a very useful critical biography for further reading. While not an entry-level text on the Black Death, In the Wake of the Plague will interest readers looking for a broader interpretation of its consequences. --Sunny Delaney
From Publishers Weekly
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From Library Journal
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From The New England Journal of Medicine
Copyright © 2002 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS.
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Review
"A most accessible, fascinating resource for high-school world history studies." (Booklist)
"[Cantor] makes a particularly compelling case." (Publishers Weekly)
"The best book on the Black Death...." (Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, University of Oxford, and author of Millennium: A History of the Last Thousand Years)
"Historian Cantor pull[s] together existing scholarship on the subject and provide a wide-ranging overview." (The New York Times Book of the Times)
"[Cantor] sounds the depths of medieval history for truths that are always relevant to our times." (Anne Rice)
"Cantor illuminates intricate connections [that] allter the course of culture, religion, war, and peace in incalculable ways." (Boston Globe)
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Product details
- ASIN : B00O6605AY
- Publisher : Simon & Schuster; Reissue edition (October 14, 2014)
- Publication date : October 14, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 15253 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 257 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #183,627 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #17 in Communicable Diseases (Kindle Store)
- #34 in Medical History
- #88 in History of Medieval Europe
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a font of information about this horrific biomedical disaster and the way it impacted life in Western Europe. I have always felt sympathy for
our ancestors who lived through this terrifying event because they had no knowledge of it's cause or how to deal with it. A terrifying thought but
similiar to our experience with AIDS and Ebola today. Thank you Professor Cantor for your insight into this devastating medical disaster and
how it shaped our world. K. Egan
First, Professor Cantor was a Rhodes Scholar. He taught history at the University of Chicago, NYU, Columbia and the University of Tel Aviv. Not shabby. But among academic historians he was considered a Tory. He was also a talented and successful popular writer. These factors do not engender warm-fuzzies among envious campus curmudgeons and may contribute to the animosity toward this book. This was a late work of a most accomplished man accustomed to writing as a stream of consciousness; he was pouring his inestimable knowledge of history on the pages in a race against time (of which he had little left). So I agree that the editing could have been a bit tighter (hence four not five stars).
But if it is somewhat a stream of consciousness it is still neither convoluted nor full of isolated tidbits; its organization is quite obvious. The effects of the plague on European society were multifaceted and Professor Cantor examines each of those facets - the effects on the royal families (particularly that of Edward III and his son John of Gaunt), the Hundred Years War, the serfs (and indeed the end of serfdom), agricultural practices, commerce and economy. He shows how the plague greatly increased the power and influence of women while at the same time devastating the clergy and weakening the Church. This diminution of the Church contributed to the coming Reformation. And he shows how the effects of the plague are with us today. The natural selection process of the plague now protects many folks of white European ancestry from HIV infection due to a mutation in a particular cell surface antigen that is necessary to the acquisition of both diseases.
And no, there were not many "thoughtful nobles" in the 14th century. During that the very height of chivalric feudalism, the nobility was far too busy observing mass, having promiscuous sex and killing each other to ponder much of anything but their salvation and their next conquest. Besides, there was little left to them to ponder. In this era before the printing press, books were rare and expensive. Higher thinking was dominated by the Thomist synthesis of Aristotelian scholasticism and Catholic theology. Anything that strayed from this was heresy worthy of capital castigation. The class system was rigid. Ignorance, prejudice and piety rendered this society suffering the plague completely incapable of responding to it effectively and that is part of Professor Cantor's message.
Nor is the book disjointed or difficult to follow if one has some acquaintance with the age. This is not a text for a freshman course in Medieval History. It is a sophisticated study that presumes the reader actually knows who the 1st Duke of Lancaster was and grasps his historical importance. Many of the primary sources for this book are academic and hitherto unreported in the popular literature. They include correspondences, inventories and official communiqués all named in the text and all catalogued in a ten page critical bibliography. Thus, Professor Cantor's judgments and assessments are well founded and well cited. The chapter on the effects of the plague on European Jews, far from blaming them, is entirely sympathetic, clearly demonstrating how they were brutally blamed for the plague due to superstition, fear and hatred with comments on how this mistreatment echoed down the future.
The section on a posited correlation between the plague and anthrax is fascinating but it does demonstrate Professor Cantor's lack of expertise in some scientific aspects of "biomedical disaster" (a term he uses a bit to distraction, I think accounting for the accusation of repetition). Anthrax is not spread easily as an airborne contagion nor by flea bites but by direct ingestion of spores. Outbreaks would have been small and localized (and terrifying). But the hypothesis has noteworthy support in the scientific community and Dr. Cantor does an able and engaging job of presenting it as he does the hypothesis that the disease was brought by a space borne swarm of bacteria descending on the Earth. This Andromeda theory is not widely embraced in the scientific community but Professor Cantor presents it in an interesting and dispassionate narrative. These accounts are further evidence that Professor Cantor was attempting to look at the plague from all possible angles.
And he succeeded. So I reiterate, THIS IS A VERY GOOD BOOK. Read it. But you may wish to read Professor Cantor's earlier book "The Civilization of the Middle Ages" first so you might better understand this one.
I would recommend this book to any researcher or student interested in this subject of history. This book gives an extensive point of view on the people who actually lived during the time of the Plague, the mid-1300’s . The book “In the Wake of the Plague” tells you how people reacted to the plague and what they did. Some people started to blame their religion and converted to another one and others look at the scientific side of it by using their knowledge and the knowledge of philosophers.
What this book needs is more broad examples of cause and effect of the Black Plague. For example; how did it spread so fast, were there people to blame for it and how did it change the world we live in today. Besides not having any broad examples this was an amazing book that I would fully recommend.
Sort-of based on the happenings surrounding the Black Death, this book doesn't ever come to any conclusions about the material presented - either original or in support of others'. The author plays fast and loose with historical facts and renders large doses of his highly personalized opinion on a variety of issues.
Don't bother picking this one up. This is one of those books that should never have been printed in the first place.
Top reviews from other countries
Heute wurden einige Ansichten schon widerlegt (vor allem im medizinischen Bereich). Mich stört auch der übertrieben wertende Ton des Buches, was es leider nicht besser macht als ein populärwissenschaftliches Werk. Immerhin unterhaltsam.





