A Cattle Panzootic in Early Fourteenth-Century Europe

In the early fourteenth century, annals, chronicles, correspondence, petitions, and poems all document severe mortalities of cattle in regions as distant as Mongolia and Iceland. Relevant passages from this literature are collected here and used with manorial accounts from England and Wales to illum...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Newfield, Timothy
Other Authors: History
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: British Agricultural History Society 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1893/11961
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bahs/agrev/2009/00000057/00000002/art00003
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/11961/1/Newfield%20-%20AhGR%20-%202009.pdf
Description
Summary:In the early fourteenth century, annals, chronicles, correspondence, petitions, and poems all document severe mortalities of cattle in regions as distant as Mongolia and Iceland. Relevant passages from this literature are collected here and used with manorial accounts from England and Wales to illuminate a European cattle panzootic that spread west from central Europe c.1315, in the context of a widespread subsistence crisis (the Great European Famine), persisting in Ireland until c.1325. The origins, duration and extent of the pestilence are considered and a relatively detailed picture of its epizootiology is drawn. How the panzootic might be retrospectively diagnosed and why a diagnosis should be attempted is also discussed.