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  1. By the mid-1390s a post-plague equilibrium had finally been established. Gains in GDP per capita flattened, prices sagged and lost their volatility, real wages and earnings levelled, and all sectors of the economy exhibited a tendency towards over-supply. Government labour and economic policies were now weakly enforced.

  2. 20 de jun. de 2017 · Robert Wilde. Updated on June 20, 2017. The Black Death was an epidemic which spread across almost all of Europe in the years 1346-53. The plague killed over a third of the entire population. It has been described as the worst natural disaster in European history and is responsible for changing the course of that history to a great degree.

  3. Western legends of the Black Death in the Far East go back to contemporary 14th century accounts of the plague in Europe and the Middle East [3]. Witnesses of the Black Death fueled by traveler’s stories imagined that all the known world was stricken, embellishing their writing accordingly.

  4. The New Cambridge Medieval History - April 2000. for the purposes of discussing European commerce, the fourteenth century is a very difficult unit. Most of the first half of the century had much in common with the thirteenth century, and in many ways trading patterns in these years are the fruition and culmination of the so-called ‘commercial revolution’ of the long thirteenth century.

  5. Jon Arrizabalaga explores these issues in fourteenth-century Southern Europe, focussing on the so-called ‘Black Death’ of 1348–49. He shows that the fear caused by epidemics in turn led to the belief that the poison of epidemics could not only be spread deliberately by evil persons, but also be man-made, often in the form of powders ...

  6. 15 de jun. de 2022 · These sites are thought to have housed victims of a fourteenth-century epidemic as tombstone inscriptions directly dated to 1338–1339 ... an isolate from the Volga region in eastern Europe 17, ...

  7. Edward Peters. History of Europe - Crisis, Recovery, Resilience: Both ancient and modern historians have often conceived the existence of civilizations and historical periods in terms of the biological stages of human life: birth, development, maturity, and decay. Once the Middle Ages was identified as a distinct historical period, historians ...