Rats, Communications, and Plague: Toward an Ecological History

Author:

McCormick Michael1

Affiliation:

1. Francis Goelet Professor of Medieval History, Harvard University. He is the author of Origins of the European Economy: Communications and Commerce AD 300–900 (New York, 2001); Eternal Victory: Triumphal Rulership in Late Antiquity, Byzantium and the Early Medieval West (New York, 1986; 2d ed. 1990).

Abstract

During the last twenty years, archaeozoological research has significantly transformed the picture of the black rat (rattus rattus) in classical antiquity and medieval Europe. These new data, in conjunction with extant texts from these periods, make a great contribution to the understanding of the bubonic plagues of the sixth and the fourteenth centuries, as well as to the history of the communications and economic systems linking the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic. The study of ancient rats and their colonization extends the temporal and geographical groundwork for a fully historical global ecology.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,History,History and Philosophy of Science,History

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