This medieval commentary reflects a lived reality: a world turned upside down by mass fear, contagion, and death.
Yet, society recovered. Life continued despite the uncertainty. But it was not “business-as-usual” in the aftermath—the threat of plague remained.
Slow and Painful Recovery
The post-Black Death world had “
not been made any better by its renewal.” The French monk, Guillaume de Nangis, lamented that men were more “miserly and grasping,” “greedy and quarrelsome” and involved in more “brawls, disputes, and lawsuits.”
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The shortage of workers in the aftermath was acute. The contemporary
Historia Roffensis notes that swaths of land in England “
remained uncultivated” in a world dependent on agricultural production.
Sometimes, the stimulus came by force. In 1349, the English government issued its
Ordinance of Laborers, which legislated able-bodied men and women be paid salaries and wages at the pre-plague 1346 rate.
Other times, the recovery was more organic. According to the French Carmelite friar, Jean de Venette, “
everywhere women conceived more readily than usual;” none was barren and pregnant women abounded. Several gave birth to twins and triplets, signaling a new age in the aftermath of such great mortality.
A Common and Familiar Enemy
Then, the plague returned. A
second pestilence struck England in 1361. A third wave affected several other countries in 1369. A fourth and fifth wave followed in 1374-79 and 1390-93 respectively.
Plague was a constant feature in late medieval and early modern life. Between 1348 and 1670, wrote historians, Andrew Cunningham and Ole Peter Grell, it was a regular and recurring event:
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No generation escaped its wrath.
Controlling the Disaster
Governments weren’t shy in their responses. While their experience could never prevent an outbreak, their management of disease tried to mitigate future disasters.Queen Elizabeth I’s
Plague Order of 1578 implemented a series of controls to support the infected and their families. Throughout England, a government initiative ensured that infected people did not leave their homes for food or work.
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In some cases, barriers, or
cordons sanitaires, were built around infected communities. But they sometimes did more harm than good. According to the Enlightenment historian Jean-Pierre Papon, residents of the Provençal town of Digne in 1629 were prevented from leaving, from burying their dead and from constructing
cabanes, where they might have otherwise safely isolated from the disease.
State and Moral Authority
Experience and regulatory measures weren’t always effective.
The great plague that struck the southern French city of Marseille between 1720 and 1722 killed an
estimated 100,000 people. Following the arrival of the Grand Saint-Antoine, a merchant ship returning from the Levant, “
proper care and remedies” to prevent the fatal consequences of this disease were delayed and ignored. The disease spread to all parts of the city.
The plague began to rage there within a matter of weeks. A corrupt doctor, false bills of health, political and economic pressures to unload the ship’s merchandise, and corrupt officials investigating the initial spread of the disease, all contributed to a disaster that could scarcely be contained in southern France.
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Hospitals were saturated, unable to “receive the vast quantity of sick which came to them in throngs.” Exercising “double diligence,” authorities built new hospitals in the alleys, “fitted up large tents” on the city’s outskirts, filling them with “
as many straw beds as possibly could remain there.”
Fearful of transmission on its shores, the English government quickly updated its protective measures. The
Quarantine Act of 1721 threatened violence, imprisonment, or death on anyone endeavoring to escape the enforced confinement, or those refusing to obey the new restrictions.
Social dislocation was an inevitable result—a necessary evil. But as medieval and early modern experiences with plague remind us, it is not a permanent fixture.
Kriston R. Rennie is a visiting fellow at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies in Canada and an associate professor in medieval history at The University of Queensland in Australia. This article was first published on The Conversation.