CCOLDER WEATHER, FAILED HARVESTS, AND RESULTING MALNOURISHMENT left Europe’s population susceptible to disease; unfortunately for the continent, a virulent disease appeared in the mid-fourteenth century. Around 1300, improvements in ship design had allowed year-round shipping for the first time. European merchants took advantage of these advances, and ships continually at sea carried all types of cargo. Just as modern air travel has allowed diseases such as AIDS and the H1N1 virus to spread quickly over very long distances, medieval shipping allowed the diseases of the time to do the same. The most frightful of these diseases, carried on Genoese ships, first emerged in western Europe in 1347; the disease was later called the Black Death.
FlagellantsIn this manuscript illumination from 1349, shirtless flagellants scourge themselves with whips as they walk through the streets of the Flemish city of Tournai. The text notes that they are asking for God’s grace to return to the city after it had been struck with the “most grave” illness. (Private Collection/The Bridgeman Art Library)