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The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague

Posted By: FenixN
The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague

The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague
24xHDRip | MP4/AVC, ~1507 kb/s | 1280x720 | Duration: 12:12:42 | English: AC3, 192 kb/s (2 ch) | + PDF Guide
Genre: History, Epidemy

In the late 1340s, a cataclysmic plague shook medieval Europe to its core. The bacterial disease known to us as the Black Death swept westward across the continent, leaving a path of destruction from Crimea and Constantinople to Italy, France, Spain, and ultimately most of Europe, traveling as far west as England and Iceland. Within these locations, the plague killed up to 50% of the population in less than 10 years—a staggering 75 million dead.

Many of us know the Black Death as a catastrophic event of the medieval world. But three vital elements of the story often go unrecognized:

The Black Death was arguably the most significant event in Western history, profoundly affecting every aspect of human life, from the economic and social to the political, religious, and cultural.
In its wake, the plague left a world that was utterly changed, forever altering the traditional structure of European societies and forcing a rethinking of every single system of Western civilization: food production and trade, the Church, political institutions, law, art, and more.
In large measure, by the profundity of the changes it brought, the Black Death produced the modern world we live in today.

While the story of the Black Death is one of destruction and loss, its breathtaking scope and effects make it one of the most compelling and deeply intriguing episodes in human history. Understanding the remarkable unfolding of the plague and its aftermath provides a highly revealing window not only on the medieval world but also on the forces that brought about the Renaissance, the Protestant Reformation, and modernity itself.

Speaking to the full magnitude of this world-changing historical moment, The Black Death: The World’s Most Devastating Plague, taught by celebrated medievalist Dorsey Armstrong of Purdue University, takes you on an unforgettable excursion into the time period of the plague, its full human repercussions, and its transformative effects on European civilization.

A Catastrophe Unprecedented in Human Experience

In 24 richly absorbing lectures, you’ll follow the path of the epidemic in its complete trajectory across medieval Europe. You’ll examine the epidemiological causes of the disaster; the social panic it spawned; its influence on religion, society, politics, economics, and art; and the long-term consequences for a continent that, less than two centuries later, would have the technology and the wherewithal to explore a new world.

In the process, you’ll learn about these remarkable and emblematic effects of the Black Death:

By revealing the corruption and inadequacies of the Church in the face of people’s desperate need, the plague sowed the seeds of the Reformation.
The plague upended the class system in Europe, permanently changing the balance of power between laborers and lords, peasants and nobles.
The epidemic transformed social opportunities for the working and merchant classes: peasants could become clergy, serfs could become tenant farmers, merchants could marry into the nobility, and women could enter trades and professions.
Perhaps most surprising of all, those who survived the plague were often wealthier than they’d been before, and had access to more opportunities.

These changes utterly upended structures of social, economic, and religious power that had been in place for centuries, leaving chaos in their wake—and room for new ideas and institutions to arise.


Lectures:
TTC8241 S01E01 Europe on the Brink of the Black Death
TTC8241 S01E02 The Epidemiology of Plague
TTC8241 S01E03 Did Plague Really Cause the Black Death?
TTC8241 S01E04 The Black Death's Ports of Entry
TTC8241 S01E05 The First Wave Sweeps across Europe
TTC8241 S01E06 The Black Death in Florence
TTC8241 S01E07 The Black Death in France
TTC8241 S01E08 The Black Death in Avignon
TTC8241 S01E09 The Black Death in England
TTC8241 S01E10 The Black Death in Walsham
TTC8241 S01E11 The Black Death in Scandinavia
TTC8241 S01E12 The End of the First Wave
TTC8241 S01E13 Medieval Theories about the Black Death
TTC8241 S01E14 Cultural Reactions from Flagellation to Hedonism
TTC8241 S01E15 Jewish Persecution during the Black Death
TTC8241 S01E16 Plague's Effects on the Medieval Church
TTC8241 S01E17 Plague Saints and Popular Religion
TTC8241 S01E18 Artistic Responses to the Black Death
TTC8241 S01E19 Literary Reponses to the Black Death
TTC8241 S01E20 The Economics of the Black Death
TTC8241 S01E21 The Black Death's Political Outcomes
TTC8241 S01E22 Communities That Survived the First Wave
TTC8241 S01E23 Later Plague Outbreaks: 1353-1666
TTC8241 S01E24 How the Black Death Transformed the World

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The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague

The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague

The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague

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