Quantum redactiones paginae "Mors atra" differant

Content deleted Content added
Jondel (disputatio | conlationes)
No edit summary
Jondel (disputatio | conlationes)
No edit summary
Linea 2:
De Johannes Isacius Pontanus' excipiens verbi 'Atra Mors ' in pagina 476]</ref>, etiam cognita ut '''Pestis grandis'''{{FD ref}} aut '''magna mortalitas''',<ref>Anno 1349: "[http://digital.library.mcgill.ca/ms-17/folio.php?p=139r&showitem=139r-155v_CottonNeroCVII80r-84v_11PaschalTables_3Annals&highlight=mortalitas Magna mortalitas ita quod vix media pars populi remanebat]": ''Red Book of Thorney'' ([[Bibliotheca Universitatis Cantabrigiensis|ULC]] MS. Add. 3020-3021, anno fere 1456 exscriptus)</ref> fuit [[pandemia]] quae exitiabilior ulla erat in histora humana, erumpiens in mortis aestimabilis inter 75 et 200 miliones hominium in [[Eurasia]] et cuius culmine in [[Europa]] erat inter annos 1347 et 1351. Bacterium Yersinia pestis, quod erumpit in multis formis pestis, creditur originem fuisse. Pestis hae creavit series eversiones [[religio]]nis, socialis, economicae quae graviditer affecit cursu historiae Europae.
 
Atra mors putatur in ortum fuisse in campo sicco [[Media Asia|Mediae MedioAsiae]] unde commeavit per [[Via Serica|Viam Sericam]], [[Crimerea]]m attingentem anno 1343.
 
The Black Death, also known as the Great Plague, the Black Plague, or simply the Plague, was one of the most devastating pandemics in human history, resulting in the deaths of an estimated 75 to 200 million people in Eurasia and peaking in Europe from 1347 to 1351.[1][2][3] The bacterium Yersinia pestis, which results in several forms of plague, is believed to have been the cause.[4] The plague created a series of religious, social and economic upheavals, which had profound effects on the course of European history.