Encyclopedia of the Black Death / Joseph P. Byrne.

Byrne, Joseph Patrick.
Santa Barbara, Calif. : ABC-CLIO, c2012.
Added to CLICnet on 07/19/2013


Check CLICnet for availability
Notes:

  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 375-404) and index.
  • Abandonment — AIDS and plague — al-Asqalani, Ibn Haja (1372-1449) — Alchemy — Allah — Almanacs — al-Manbiji, Muhammad — al-Maqrizi, Muhammad (al-Makrizi 1363/4-1442) — Amulets, Talismans, and magic — Anatomy and dissection — Animals — Anticlericalism — Anti-Semitism and Anti-Jewish violence before the Black Death — Apocalypse and apocalypticism — Apothecaries — Arabic-Persian medicine and practitioners — Armenian Bole — Armies — Arrows — Ars moriendi (The art of dying) — Art, Effects of plague on — Articella — Astrology — Athens, Plague of — Avicenna (Abu Ali al-Husayn ibn Abd Allah ibn Sina 980-1037) –
  • Barcelona, Spain — Bells — Bertrand, Jean Baptiste 1670-1752) — Bezoar stones — Bible — Biblical plagues — Bills of health — Bills of mortality — Bimaristans (also Maristans) — Bishops and popes — Black death (1347-1352) — Black Death: debate over the medical nature of — Black Death: origins and early spread — Black Death, plague and pestilence (Terms) — Bleeding/Phlebotomy — Boccaccio, Giovanni (1313-1375) — Books of hours — Borromeo, Federigo (1564-1631) — Borromeo St. Charles (San Carlo 1538-1484) — Boyle, Robert (1627-1691) — Broadsheets, Broadsides, and pamphlets — Bubonic plague — Bubonic plague in North America — Bullein, William (d. 1576) –
  • Caffa (Kaffa, Feodosiya), Ukraine — Cairo, Egypt — Canutus (Kanutus) Plague tract — Cause of plagues: historical theories — Cellites and Alexians — Charlatans and quacks — Chaucer, Geoffrey (c. 1340/43-1400) — Chauliac, Guy de (Guido de Cauliaco c. 1300-1367) — Children — China — Chinese traditional medicine — Christ — Chronicles and annals — Churches, Plague — Ciompi revolt — Clement VI, Pope (1291/92-1352 r. 1342-1352) — Clothing — Compendium of Paris — Confraternities — Consilia and plague tracts — Constantinople/Istanbul — Contagion theory — Cordons sanitaires — Corpse carriers — Corpses — Couvin, Simon de Symon de Covino c. 1320-1367) — Crime and punishment –
  • Dancing mania — Danse Macabre — Death, Depictions of — Defoe, Daniel (1660-1731) — Dekker, Thomas (1570?-1632) — De Mertens, Charles (1737-1788) — Demographic and economic effects of plague: the Islamic World — Demographic effects of plague: Europe 1347-1400 — Demographic effects of plague: Europe 1400-1500 — Demographic effects of plague: Europe 1500-1722 — Demography — Demons, Satan, and the devil — Diagnosing plague — Dietary regimens — Diseases, opportunistic and subsidiary — Disinfection and fumigation — DNA and the second plague pandemic — Donne, John (1572-1631) — Doors — Dublin, Ireland — Earthquakes — Economic effects of plague in Europe — Empirics — End of second plague Pandemic: theories — Epidemic and pandemic — Ex voto — Expulsion of victims — Eyam, England (1666) –
  • Famine — Fernel Jean (c. 1497-1558) — Feudalism and Manorialism — Ficino, Marsiglio (1433-1499) — Flagellants — Fleas — Flight — Florence, Italy — Fracastoro, Girolamo (1478-1553) — Friars (Mendicants ) — Funerals, Catholic — Funerals, Muslim — Funerals, Protestant — Galen and Galenism (129 CE-c.216) — Gentitle de Foligno (c. 1275-1348) — Germ theory — God the Father — Gold — Governments, Civil — Graunt, John (1620-1674) — Gravediggers — Gregory the Great, Pope (r. 590-604) — Grindal, Edmund (1519-1583) — Guilds — Health Boards, Magistracies, and Commissions — Heaven and hell — Henry VIII, King of England (1491-1547 r. 1509-1547) — Hippocrates (c. 460-c. 360 BCE) and the Hippocratic Corpus — Hodges, Nathaniel (1629-1688) — Hospitals — Humoral theory — Hundred Years War (1337-1453) –
  • I promessi sposi (1827) — Ibn al-Khatib, Lisad-ad Din (1313-1374) — I promessi sposi (1827) — Ibn al-Khatib, Lisad-ad Din (1313-1374) — Ibn Battuta, Abu Abdullah (1304-1368) — Ibn Khatimah, Abu Jafar Ahmed (1323?-1369) — Individualism and individual liberties — Ingrassia, Giovanni Filippo (Gianfilippo 1510-1580) — Islam and medicine — Islamic civil responses — Islamic religious responses — Islip, Simon (d. 1366) — Issyk Kul, Kyrgystan — Jacquerie — James I and VI Stuart, King (1566-1625) — Jewish Treasure Hoards — Jews — Jinn — Job — John of Burgundy (c. 1338-1390) also Johannes de Burgundia, Burdeus, La Barba, Burgoyne — Jonson, Ben (1572-1637) — Justinian, Plague of (First Plague Pandemic) — Kircher, Athanasius (1602-1680) — Kitasato, Shibasaburo (1852-1931) — Koch, Robert (1843-1910) –
  • Labourers, Ordinance and Statute of — Langland, William (c. 1325-after 1388) — Languages: Vernacular and Latin — Lazarettos and pest houses — Lazarus — Leechbooks — Leprosy (Hansen’s disease) and Leprosarium — Li Muisis, Gilles (Le Muisit 1271/72-1553) — Little Ice Age — Lollards — London, England — London, Great Plague of (1665-1666) — London’s East Smithfield Plague Cemetery — Luther, Martin (1483-1546) — Lydgate, John (c. 1370-1450) — Malthusianism — Marseille, France — Mass graves and plague cemeteries — Mead, Richard (1673-1754) — Mecca — Medical education (1300-1500, Medieval Europe) — Medical education (1500-1700, Early Modern Europe) — Medical Humanism — Merchants — Mercuriale, Girolamo (1530-1606) — Metaphors for plague — Miasma theory — Milan, Italy — Mongols — Monks, Nuns, and Monasteries — Moral legislation — Mortality literature, Christian — Morbidity, Mortality, and virulence — Moscow, Russia — Muhammad the Prophet (570-632) –
  • Naples, Italy — Narwhal/Unicorn Horn Powder — Nashe, Thomas (1567-1601) — Nobility — Notaries — Nurses — Paracelsus (1493-1541) and Parcelsianism — Parets, Miquel (1610-1661) — Paris, France — Parish — Pasteur, Louis (1882-1895) — Pastors, preachers, and ministers — Peasants — Pesants’ revolt, English — Pepys, Samuel (1633-1703) — Petrarch, Francesco (1304-1374) — Physicians — Physicians, Court — Physicians, Town — Pilgrims and pilgrimage — Plague in Europe, 1360-1500 — Plague in Europe, 1500-1725 — Plague Memorials — Plague orders and national authorities — Plague Saints — Plague stone — Plagues in the west, 900-1345 — Pneumonic Plague — Poetry, European — Poetry, Islamic — Poisoning and Plague spreading — Poverty and Plague — Prayer and Fasting — Priests — Printing — Prisoners — Processions — Prophylaxes — Prostitutes — Public Health — Public Sanitation — Purgatives — Purgatory — Quarantine –
  • Rats and other plague carriers — Reformation and protestantism — Remedies, External — Remedies, Internal — Repopulation — Rome, Italy — St. Januarius (San Gennaro d. c. 305) — St. Michael the Archangel — St. Nicholas of Tolentino (1245-1305) — St. Roche — St. Rosalia — St. Sebastian — Scientific Revolution — Searchers — Second plague Pandemic (1340s-1840s) — Septicemic Plague — Servants, Household — Shakespeare, William (1564-1616) — Shutting in — Signs of plague — Simond, Paul-Louis (1858-1947) — Sin — Social Construction of disease — Sumptuary Laws — Surgeons/Barbers — Sydenham, Thomas (1625-1689) — Syrups and Electuaries — Ta’un — Taxes and public finance — Tears against the Plague — Theriac and mithridatum — Third plague pandemic — Thirty-Years’ War (1619-1648) — Three living meet three dead — Toads — Tobacco — Transi Tombs — Triumph of death — Tumbrels –
  • Urine and Uroscopy — Valesco de Tarenta (d. after 1426) — Van Diemerbroeck, Isbrand (Ysbrand, IJsbrand 1609-1674) — Van Helmont, Joan Baptista (Johannes Jan 1579-1644) — Venice, Italy — Vesalius, Andreas (1514-1565) — Vienna, Austria — Vinario, Raimondo Chalmel de (Magister Raimundus Chalmelli Chalin d. after 1328) — Virgin Mary — Virgin soil disease — Wands — Wills, and testaments — Witches and witchcraft — Wither, George (1588-1667) — Women Medical Practitioners — Yeoman farmers and Gentry — Yersin, Alexandre (1863-1943) — Yersinia pestis — Zodiac Man.

Subjects:

Requested by Wittenbreer, B

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>