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The Black Death in England: Journal of the Plague Years in the Fourteenth Century
Barnes and Noble
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The Black Death in England: Journal of the Plague Years in the Fourteenth Century in Franklin, TN
Current price: $34.95

Barnes and Noble
The Black Death in England: Journal of the Plague Years in the Fourteenth Century in Franklin, TN
Current price: $34.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
A collection of the individual stories of victims and survivors of the 14thcentury plague, restoring humanity to staggering statistics.
We have all heard of the Black Death and how it scythed its way through England and the rest of Europe in the late 1340s, and we hear that a third or perhaps even half of the entire English population died in this terrible pandemic. However the numbers are so vast that the victims become little more than statistics. They blur into a kind of unreality, a mute testimony to a catastrophe beyond imagination or comprehension.
The Black Death in England aims to rectify this by giving names to some of the people who died in the fourteenthcentury epidemics of the Plague Years and recognises those who lived through it, recreating something of their lives and what they went through.
We have all heard of the Black Death and how it scythed its way through England and the rest of Europe in the late 1340s, and we hear that a third or perhaps even half of the entire English population died in this terrible pandemic. However the numbers are so vast that the victims become little more than statistics. They blur into a kind of unreality, a mute testimony to a catastrophe beyond imagination or comprehension.
The Black Death in England aims to rectify this by giving names to some of the people who died in the fourteenthcentury epidemics of the Plague Years and recognises those who lived through it, recreating something of their lives and what they went through.
A collection of the individual stories of victims and survivors of the 14thcentury plague, restoring humanity to staggering statistics.
We have all heard of the Black Death and how it scythed its way through England and the rest of Europe in the late 1340s, and we hear that a third or perhaps even half of the entire English population died in this terrible pandemic. However the numbers are so vast that the victims become little more than statistics. They blur into a kind of unreality, a mute testimony to a catastrophe beyond imagination or comprehension.
The Black Death in England aims to rectify this by giving names to some of the people who died in the fourteenthcentury epidemics of the Plague Years and recognises those who lived through it, recreating something of their lives and what they went through.
We have all heard of the Black Death and how it scythed its way through England and the rest of Europe in the late 1340s, and we hear that a third or perhaps even half of the entire English population died in this terrible pandemic. However the numbers are so vast that the victims become little more than statistics. They blur into a kind of unreality, a mute testimony to a catastrophe beyond imagination or comprehension.
The Black Death in England aims to rectify this by giving names to some of the people who died in the fourteenthcentury epidemics of the Plague Years and recognises those who lived through it, recreating something of their lives and what they went through.

















