The Black Death and Subsequent Plague Waves in 14th/15th c. Eastern Central Europe

Absence and Presence – The Black Death and Subsequent Plague Waves in 14th/15th c. Eastern Central Europe

Veranstalter
Dr. Martin Bauch / Dr. András Vadas (Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe (GWZO), Leipzig / Eötvös Lorand University (ELTE), Budapest)
Ausrichter
Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe (GWZO), Leipzig / Eötvös Lorand University (ELTE), Budapest
PLZ
04105
Ort
Leipzig
Land
Deutschland
Findet statt
In Präsenz
Vom - Bis
15.11.2023 -
Deadline
15.11.2023
Von
Martin Bauch, Mensch und Umwelt, Leibniz-Institut für die Geschichte und Kultur des östlichen Europa (GWZO)

Call for articles for a thematic issue of "Historical Studies on Central Europe" (HSCE)
Deadline: 15 November 2023
Contact: martin.bauch@leibniz-gwzo.de / vadas.andras@btk.elte.hu

Absence and Presence – The Black Death and Subsequent Plague Waves in 14th/15th c. Eastern Central Europe

There's a long-standing discussion if and to what extent the first wave of the Second Plague Pandemic, the Black Death (1347-52), had an impact on Eastern Central Europe. Its virtual absence from large parts of the Polish and the Bohemian Kingdoms has long been explained with a lack of written sources, especially in comparison with the much denser documentation for England, France, and Italy. Especially since aDNA research has clarified that the Black Death was indeed caused by the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis, an overwhelming majority of plague historians argue for a scheme of "same pathogen, same outcome" all across Europe, with the Central European cases as less important exceptions to the rule. New research with scientific proxy data seems to confirm that the absent impact of the Black Death is more than just a lack of sources, confirming the overall impression of demographic continuity and even economic, political, and cultural affluence so typical for the monarchies ruled by the Luxembourgs, Piasts, and the Angevins in the second half of 14th century.

Moreover, the focus of historical plague research in recent years has shifted away from the dominant event of the Black Death to the subsequent plague waves such as pestis secunda, tertia, etc. It has long been clear to researchers that these were actually the more important plague events for Eastern Central Europe. Detailed reconstructions of their spread route are important for a deeper understanding of how plague became endemic in Europe and into which animal reservoirs the pathogen retreated between outbreak waves – and yet they are not available. Likewise, all conceivable sources of indirect demographic information on the impact of subsequent waves, such as wills or similar written sources, have not yet been adequately addressed for the plague waves of the 14th-15th centuries in East Central Europe. Furthermore, cultural phenomena connected to the recurring plague waves, like flagellants and institutionalized memory of plague victims would also merit a more detailed examination in future research.

We are looking for contributions assessing the reconstruction, the impact, and the memory of the Black Death and subsequent plague waves in Central and Eastern Europe between 1347 and ca. 1500.We plan to publish them as a thematic issue of “Historical Studies on Central Europe” https://ojs.elte.hu/hsce and hence the 6.000-10.000 word articles will undergo a double-blind peer-review process; English proof-reading will be provided by the journal.

Deadline for abstracts (300 words) in English with a short CV (1 page): 15 November 2023; the Deadline for the finalized contributions will be in spring 2024.

Kontakt

Dr. Martin Bauch (GWZO Leipzig) martin.bauch@leibniz-gwzo.de and Dr. András Vadas: vadas.andras@btk.elte.hu

https://dantean.hypotheses.org/1263
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Veröffentlicht am
20.10.2023
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Englisch
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