scholarly journals BIBILOGRAFI SEJARAH PANDEMI BLACK DEATH DI MESIR PADA ABAD KE 14 M

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Ady Fauzi Rahmani
Keyword(s):  

Tujuan penelitian ini untuk menginventarisasi dan mengidentifikasi sejumlah publikasi yang membahas Sejarah Pandemi di Mesir pada abad ke 14. Metode yang digunakan adalah metode sejarah. Hasil penelitian ini adalah ketersediaan sumber bililiografis tentang sejarah pandemi Black Death di mesir dapat berguna untuk melihat kesinambungan, paralelisme, dan perbandingan pandemic. Untuk menghadapi pandemic negara perlu mengeluarkan Kebijakan dalam keadaan darurat thaun sambil menguji vaksin dan obatnya, sampai dinyatakan layak digunakan selain itu penemuan lainnya dari penelitian ini adalah hubungan sosial antar masyarakat sangat berpengaruh terhadap kekuatan manusia dalam melawan wabah pandemic.

Author(s):  
Marcin Piatkowski

In this chapter I explain why Poland and most countries in Eastern Europe have always lagged behind Western Europe in economic development. I discuss why in the past the European continent split into two parts and how Western and Eastern Europe followed starkly different developmental paths. I then demonstrate how Polish oligarchic elites built extractive institutions and how they adopted ideologies, cultures, and values, which undermined development from the late sixteenth century to 1939. I also describe how the elites created a libertarian country without taxes, state capacity, and rule of law, and how this ‘golden freedom’ led to Poland’s collapse and disappearance from the map of Europe in 1795. I argue that Polish extractive society was so well established that it could not reform itself from the inside. It was like a black hole, where the force of gravity is so strong that the light could not come out.


Author(s):  
Samuel K. Cohn, Jr.

This chapter investigates changes in mentalities after the Black Death, comparing practices never before analysed in this context—funerary and labour laws and processions to calm God’s anger. While processions were rare or conflictual as in Catania and Messina in 1348, these rituals during later plagues bound communities together in the face of disaster. The chapter then turns to another trend yet to be noticed by historians. Among the multitude of saints and blessed ones canonized from 1348 to the eighteenth century, the Church was deeply reluctant to honour, even name, any of the thousands who sacrificed their lives to succour plague victims, physically or spiritually, especially in 1348: the Church recognized no Black Death martyrs. By the sixteenth century, however, city-wide processions and other communal rituals bound communities together with charity for the poor, works of art, and charitable displays of thanksgiving to long-dead holy men and women.


Author(s):  
Peter Linehan

This book springs from its author’s continuing interest in the history of Spain and Portugal—on this occasion in the first half of the fourteenth century between the recovery of each kingdom from widespread anarchy and civil war and the onset of the Black Death. Focussing on ecclesiastical aspects of the period in that region (Galicia in particular) and secular attitudes to the privatization of the Church, it raises inter alios the question why developments there did not lead to a permanent sundering of the relationship with Rome (or Avignon) two centuries ahead of that outcome elsewhere in the West. In addressing such issues, as well as of neglected material in Spanish and Portuguese archives, use is made of the also unpublished so-called ‘secret’ registers of the popes of the period. The issues it raises concern not only Spanish and Portuguese society in general but also the developing relationship further afield of the components of the eternal quadrilateral (pope, king, episcopate, and secular nobility) in late medieval Europe, as well as of the activity in that period of those caterpillars of the commonwealth, the secular-minded sapientes. In this context, attention is given to the hitherto neglected attempt of Afonso IV of Portugal to appropriate the privileges of the primatial church of his kingdom and to advance the glorification of his Castilian son-in-law, Alfonso XI, as God’s vicegerent in his.


1987 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 809-811
Author(s):  
Alan S. Morrison
Keyword(s):  

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