Abstract
The use of demographic data about cardinal mortality drawn from Salvador Miranda’s “Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church” archive confirms and quantifies the greater vulnerability of northern Europeans to Rome’s malarial fevers relative to their Roman counterparts. Non-Italian visitors to Rome suffered about three times the rate of malaria deaths as did Italians and Greeks, who had acquired various defenses against malaria. Northern Italians were far less susceptible than expected to Rome’s malarial fevers, however, whereas Iberian visitors to Rome were far more so. The eventual decline of malaria in Rome was not so much a function of climate change as of Rome’s steady post-1600 population growth.
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,History,History and Philosophy of Science,History
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. Malaria as a Papal Disease;Experimental and Clinical Transplantation;2023-06
2. Seasons in Italy: Northern European travelers, Rome, and malaria;Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change;2020-01-22
3. Northern European patterns of visiting Rome, 1400–1850;Journal of Tourism History;2019-05-04