Plague Era Woodcuts Shed Light on Shared Beliefs In Action

– by Patrick Magee, Visitor Services/Gallery Associate

 

Welcome back to another issue of #MedievalMedicineMonday! On Mondays, Visitor Services/Gallery Associate Patrick Magee will be exploring the depths of medieval medicine as depicted by woodcuts found in our early printed books.

This week, we’re going to look at how woodcut creators and the general public made sense of the beginnings of a plague. In Pestbuch, Hieronymus Brunschwig depicted the onset of a pandemic through a series of woodcuts, themselves serving a purpose somewhere between documentation and warning. In the woodcut drawings, Brunschwig depicts a mixture of illness at its worst alongside the continuing lives of everyday folks and doctors/attenders of the sick.

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Pestilential fevers, or, the Black Death

When the Black Death arrived in England in summer 1348, it had already hit China, middle Asia, the Crimea, and Sicily, and had begun moving inland to the rest of continental Europe.  The death rate varied from region to region, but it is probably fair to say that it ranged from about 12% to 66% of the population.  Some evidence points to the Black Death being the plague, a fever caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis; while other evidence suggests it was viral in origin.  Regardless of the cause, it was extremely infectious and caused upheaval for decades everywhere it hit.

Bernard de Gordon, in his Lilium medicinae, enumerates some signs of impending plague in the chapter entitled “Pestitential fevers.”  Each chapter in Lilium is divided into 6 sections: the first included the definitions, names, and types; the second, the causes; the third, the diagnosis; the fourth, the prognosis; the fifth, the treatment; and finally, the sixth – the clarification.  The following is a loose translation of a 1551 version of Lilium, from the second section of “Pestilential fevers.”

 

Cap[itulum] ix. De febribus pestilentialis f. 15v. Bernard de Gordon’s Lilium medicinae, 1348 (Oxford?). Call no. 10a 249.
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