Article

The Birth of the Black Death: Biology, Climate, Environment and the Beginnings of the Second Plague Pandemic in Early Fourteenth-Century Asia

Details

Citation

Slavin P (2023) The Birth of the Black Death: Biology, Climate, Environment and the Beginnings of the Second Plague Pandemic in Early Fourteenth-Century Asia. Environmental History, 28 (2). https://doi.org/10.1086/723955

Abstract
The article considers the environmental context of the early fourteenth-century Tian Shan region, in which the Second Plague Pandemic in general and the Black Death in particular commenced. It suggests that this major evolutionary event may have started in the context of profound eco-biological and climatic shifts, triggering bacterial activity (i.e., Yersia pestis infection, transmission, and dissemination capacity) and initiating what became the single harshest human killer in known history. In particular, the article underscores how landscape change, weather conditions, and seismic activity in that region prepared the ground for the beginning and early spread of the plague pandemic.

Journal
Environmental History: Volume 28, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2023
Publication date online31/03/2023
Date accepted by journal01/10/2022
ISSN1084-5453
eISSN1930-8892

People (1)

Professor Philip Slavin

Professor Philip Slavin

Professor, History