CRISI EPIDEMICA E CRISI ECONOMICA. IL DIBATTITO STORIOGRAFICO SULLE CONSEGUENZE DELLA GRANDE PESTE MEDIEVALE

Federico Del Tredici

Abstract


Pandemic crisis and economic crisis. The historiographical debate on the effects of the Black Death. – The great plague which hit Europe from 1348 has long been at the core of different historiographical interests. Alongside research focusing on the demographic consequences of the plague, other studies examined strictly epidemiologic issues, the socio-political effects of the crisis, or its „emotive‟ impact in the long term. Among the questions taken into consideration, the relationship between plague and economic trends has obviously played a crucial part. The essay aims to look at this debate, especially highlighting the significant interpretative changes which emerged in the past few decades. The gloomy picture of the post-plague economy, marked by a long decline, has now been replaced by a more optimistic view, which tends to underline the positive consequences brought about by the demographic drop in the medium-long term: in terms of wage growth, for instance, or increase in consumption, but also of the weakening of aristocratic control over peasants‟ work, processes of productive specialization, and the increase of commercial exchange.


Keyword


Black Death; Economic crisis; Middle Ages

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.19246/DOCUGEO2281-7549/202001_23

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ISSN: 2281-7549

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