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The Black Death

How the Plague of the 14th Century Reshaped Civilization

Sienna M Blakewood

$55.95   $47.73

Paperback

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English
Umar
30 April 2026
THEY CALLED IT GOD'S PUNISHMENT. SCIENCE CALLS IT THE DEADLIEST BIOLOGICAL EVENT IN HUMAN HISTORY.

In the autumn of 1347, twelve ships docked at a Sicilian port. The sailors aboard were dying. Their skin was black with festering swellings. Blood seeped from places blood should never seep. Port authorities ordered the ships to leave immediately.

It was already too late.

Within three years, one third of the entire human population of Europe was dead. Twenty-five million people. Gone. Not in a war. Not in a famine. Killed by something so small it was invisible to the naked eye, traveling on the backs of rats, carried in the bite of a flea, spreading through the air of a sick man's breath. The Black Death did not arrive like an army. It arrived like a whisper. And then it became a scream that lasted a century.

This is that story.

The Black Death: How the Plague of the 14th Century Reshaped Civilization is the definitive narrative history of the greatest catastrophe the Western world has ever faced, written not as a textbook but as the gripping, human, heartbreaking story it actually is.

Dr. Sienna M. Blakewood takes you inside the burning cities and the silent villages. She puts you in the room with the Florentine merchant watching his children die one by one. She walks you through the Venetian streets where bodies stacked faster than the living could bury them.

Inside you will discover:

How a bacterium born in the body of a Central Asian marmot travelled five thousand miles and brought the most powerful civilization in the medieval world to its knees in less than four years.

How ordinary people became perpetrators of organized mass murder across dozens of European cities when fear needed somewhere to land.

How a writer named Boccaccio sat in a city of corpses and produced one of the greatest works of literature in human history.

How the catastrophe that killed a third of Europe also, impossibly, gave birth to the Renaissance, the Reformation, the first public health systems in Western history, and the seeds of the modern world.

And why the bacterium responsible is still alive today, circulating in rodent populations on every inhabited continent, including the one you are sitting on right now.

This is history that matters because it is not finished. Every quarantine, every contact tracing system, every governmental scramble to contain an outbreak traces its institutional DNA back to the desperate, empirical experiments of the people who first tried to stop the Black Death with nothing but observation and courage.

The people who lived through it did not know things would eventually get better. They buried their children with their own hands. They kept going anyway.

Understanding how they did it is one of the most urgently practical questions the human species can ask itself right now.

For readers of Erik Larson, Yuval Noah Harari, and Barbara Tuchman.

Open it. You will not close it until it is finished.

185 pages. 15 Chapters. One story that changed everything.
By:  
Imprint:   Umar
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 11mm
Weight:   254g
ISBN:   9798235010550
Pages:   186
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

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