Articles of interest

Thursday, March 19, 2020

What Can We Learn From The Black Death of 1346-1353?

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/55/Doutielt3.jpg
English villagers burying the dead 
 https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/55/Doutielt3.jpg


As I’ve been sitting here at home during this necessary time of self-isolation, I have been thinking a lot about the Black Death that hit the world in 1347. It’s not the numbers. Its very unlikely the COVID-19 pandemic will result in that many deaths, but we may see changes in society and in our general outlook that are similar.

The impact the Black Death had and still has is enormous. An estimated 75-200 million deaths occurred between 1347 and 1353 in Europe and the Middle East. The cluster of diseases probably originated in central Asia, and arrived in Crimea by 1343.  It arrived in Constantinople by 1347. It first entered Europe in 1347 via traders from Crimea in 1347 and it spread like wildfire. It eventually spread to all of Europe including England, Scandinavia and Russia by 1353. At the time the way in which the diseases were transmitted was unknown but it is generally believed that they were transmitted by fleas on infected rats. The rats left ships, were bitten by fleas, which in turn got onto people and transmitted them through flea bites.  There were several forms, one that appears to have been spread through the air, now thought by some to have been anthrax. Bubonic plague caused large black swellings in the groin, armpits and necks as it passed through the victim’s lymphatic system. Death came with a few days, although some survived. Estimates of Europe’s total loss range from 40% to 60% of the population. In some locations, especially England,90% of the population of small villages died. The classic film “Monty Python and the Holy Grail” highlights the devastation of the Black Death, and although it is satirical it’s not far from the truth. Satire is born in truth. The scene in which Eric Idle walks with a cart through the streets of a village calling for people to “Bring out your dead” actually happened, although not in a comical way:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jdf5EXo6I68

The Black Death had an enormous impact. It spelled the end of the feudal system, in which serfs were bound to a lord’s land. With a catastrophic loss of population workers were in great demand, and serfs left their bondage to seek employment elsewhere, and their lords were powerless to stop them. If the lords wanted people to work for them they had to pay them competitive wages.

Another impact was theological. The most common explanation given was that the Black Death was God’s judgment on a corrupt and immoral world. Other communities resorted to anti-Semitism as an explanation, accusing Jews of poisoning wells or practicing witchcraft. 

The theological impact centered around a heightened awareness of mortality. During this time groups of monks and other laypersons processed through streets flagellating themselves in penance. This became a movement even after the plague had subsided. Again, I turn to Monty Python for an illustration. I’m not aware that these penitents hit themselves on the forehead with boards, but it’s as bad as whipping themselves:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4q6eaLn2mY

The Dance of Death (1493) by Michael Wolgemut, from 
the Nuremberg Chronicle of Hartmann Schedel
The theological and social implications remained for centuries. The way that people understood death was altered. We look back at the ways that people processed death and it may appear morbid to our sensitive minds. The contemplation of a human skull to think about one’s own mortality became common, a theme that appears in late medieval and Renaissance art. Mary Magdalene was also commonly depicted with a human skull.

St. Jerome in his Study Joos Van Cleve, Netherlandish, 16th Century
The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College Poughkeepsie, New York
Purchase, Friends of the Vassar College Art Gallery Fund

As a pastor I don't think it's healthy to obsess about death, but at the same time I don't believe we think about it enough. Many shrink from the decline of elderly family members, not wanting to face the reality that that person will soon die. We even use euphemisms to refer to death, such as "passing away" or even now, simply "passing." By living as though we will never die we do not fully live.

I had a conversation with a younger colleague years ago. She commented on how one of her predecessors seemed to have a "theology of death" based on some materials he had left behind, as if that were somehow morbid or unhealthy. I thought to myself, "If you don't have a theology of death then you'd be well served to develop one for yourself."

The process of dying seems to be what people fear the most.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sc85m2mJyL8

The COVID-19 pandemic will certainly change how we view the world. The reaction that the world has had has caused economic chaos and some analysts feel we have already entered a recession. The difficulty about this is we don't know how long it will last. Perhaps China's experience may give us a clue. It started in November 2019 and today, at this writing, the first day has come and gone when not one new diagnosis has been announced in China. The rest of the world is still in the middle of it.  Italy is on its knees. Other European countries have shut down completely. Our own country is still trying to figure out what will work.

The most important thing for all of us to keep in mind is that we need each other. In the U.S. we tend to lift up rugged individualism and pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps. That's a thing of the past. We are all connected and we need each other. If some good is going to come out of this, hopefully it will be a rediscovery of the importance of community.

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