In The Great Mortality John Kelly retraces the journey of the Black Death using original source material diary fragments, letters and manuscripts. Defence analysts use it as the measure of thermonuclear war in geographical extent, abruptness and casualties. Only World War II produced more death, physical damage, and emotional suffering. At St Mary's, Ashwell, Hertfordshire, an anonymous hand carved the following inscription for 1349: 'Wretched, terrible, destructive year, the remnants of the people alone remain.'Īccording to the Foster scale, a kind of Richter scale of human disaster, the plague of 1347-51 is the second worst catastrophe in recorded history. In the spring of 1348 it was devastating the cities of central Italy, by June 1348 it had reached France and Spain, and by August England. Pestis virus entered Europe in October 1347 by Genoese galley at Messina, Sicily. It was a catastrophe that touched the lives of every individual on the continent. In just over a thousand days from 1347 to 1351 the 'Black Death' travelled across medieval Europe killing thirty per cent of its population. 'The bodies were sparsely covered that the dogs dragged them forth and devoured them And believing it to be the end of the world, no one wept for the dead, for all expected to die.' Print The Great Mortality : An Intimate History of the Black Death
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