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The World the Plague Made
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The World the Plague Made

James Belich on the Black Death and the rise of Europe

Originally published on August 8, 2022 (Episode 275)

Introduction

The pandemic of 1346—the Black Death—killed as much as half the population in some parts of Europe. Yet the catastrophe did not end there: for the next three centuries, at least thirty further outbreaks followed. The result was unimaginable suffering and tragedy from which no one was untouched.

But the Black Death also set in motion cultural and economic renewal. Labor scarcity encouraged new or improved technologies—wind power, water power, gunpowder. Rising disposable incomes expanded consumption of silks, sugars, spices, furs, gold, and slaves. It was not despite the plague, argues James Belich, but because of it, that Europe flourished.


About the Guest

James Belich is the Beit Professor of Imperial and Commonwealth History at the University of Oxford and cofounder of the Oxford Centre for Global History. His books include a two-volume history of New Zealand, Making Peoples and Paradise Reforged. His most recent book is The World the Plague Made: The Black Death and the Rise of Europe (Princeton University Press, 2022).


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