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The Justinianic Plague: An inconsequential...
Journal article

The Justinianic Plague: An inconsequential pandemic?

Abstract

Existing mortality estimates assert that the Justinianic Plague (circa 541 to 750 CE) caused tens of millions of deaths throughout the Mediterranean world and Europe, helping to end antiquity and start the Middle Ages. In this article, we argue that this paradigm does not fit the evidence. We examine a series of independent quantitative and qualitative datasets that are directly or indirectly linked to demographic and economic trends during this two-century period: Written sources, legislation, coinage, papyri, inscriptions, pollen, ancient DNA, and mortuary archaeology. Individually or together, they fail to support the maximalist paradigm: None has a clear independent link to plague outbreaks and none supports maximalist reconstructions of late antique plague. Instead of large-scale, disruptive mortality, when contextualized and examined together, the datasets suggest continuity across the plague period. Although demographic, economic, and political changes continued between the 6th and 8th centuries, the evidence does not support the now commonplace claim that the Justinianic Plague was a primary causal factor of them.

Authors

Mordechai L; Eisenberg M; Newfield TP; Izdebski A; Kay JE; Poinar H

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 116, No. 51, pp. 25546–25554

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Publication Date

December 17, 2019

DOI

10.1073/pnas.1903797116

ISSN

0027-8424

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