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8 - Suffering the uncomprehended: disease as a natural agent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2014

Richard Hoffmann
Affiliation:
York University, Toronto
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Summary

Successive chapters have traced the interplay in medieval Europe between natural conditions that called for human adaptation and technological development on the one side and the environmental consequences of such cultural changes as landscape creation, cerealization, energy technologies, and urbanization on the other. But the interaction between human culture and the natural sphere has two dynamic elements, not just one: the natural sphere is always an autonomous actor, capable of initiating and altering human environmental relations, not merely part of the scenery or something that responds to whatever humans do. This chapter and the next show what natural forces and phenomena at both the smallest biological and largest planetary scales did in the Middle Ages. Microscopic pathogens of which medieval Europeans had barely an inkling afflicted, shaped, and ended human lives.

Medieval European history is punctuated by acute and large-scale epidemic events which transpired against a shifting background of long-term endemic diseases. These experiences, both the epidemics and the patterns of endemic disease, resulted in a history of microbiological environments in medieval Europe. Parasites generated a history because the effects of biological processes on individual human bodies and society in general resonated in popular as well as learned thinking. The experience of a disease as represented in medieval culture led to programmes with material consequences arising from people trying to handle their situation. Much of what follows contrasts the present-day observer’s knowledge, riddled with historical lacunae, with the understandings of contemporaries who could observe, however acutely, only superficial symptoms of what was happening to them and struggled in vain to understand, much less to manipulate, those natural forces.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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