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To the North East the Black Death moved slowly on towards Flanders and the Low Countries. ‘It is almost impossible,’ wrote Gilles Li Muisis
44
‘to credit the mortality throughout the whole country. Travellers, merchants, pilgrims and others who have passed through it declare that they have found cattle wandering
without herdsmen in the fields, towns and waste-lands; that they have seen barns and wine-cellars standing wide open, houses empty and few people to be found anywhere…. And in many different areas, both lands and fields are lying uncultivated.’

Professor Renouard says that, though mortality in the French towns was terrifyingly high, the country escaped comparatively lightly.
45
In many areas this was certainly true but, though Li Muisis’s account may well have been embellished in the interests of the picturesque, there are too many descriptions like it to
accept
Renouard’s statement as invariably valid. At Givry, a large Burgundian village near Chalon-sur-Saône of between twelve and fifteen hundred inhabitants, the average death rate in the years before the plague was thirty each year. Between 5 August and 19 November 1348 six hundred and fifteen people died. In Saint-Pierre-du-Soucy, a rural parish in Savoy, the number of households dwindled from one hundred and eight in 1347 to sixty-eight at the end of 1348 and fifty-five in 1349. In the seven neighbouring parishes, all farming communities with small and scattered populations, the number of households fell from three hundred and three to one hundred and forty-two.
46
In areas such as these, at least, something close to half the population must have perished.

In the summer of 1349, the Black Death reached Li Muisis’s own city of Tournai. The Bishop, John de Pratis, was one of the first to die; then came a lull during which the citizens told
themselves
that they had been let off lightly. But by August the plague was raging with renewed strength:

Every day the bodies of the dead were borne to the churches, now five, now ten, now fifteen, and in the parish of St Brice sometimes twenty or thirty. In all parish churches the curates, parish clerks and sextons, to get their fees, rang morning, evening and night the
passing
bells, and by this the whole population of the city, men and women alike, began to be filled with fear.

The Town Council acted firmly to restore public confidence and check the collapse in moral standards which was likely, they feared, to bring down upon the city a still more ferocious measure of divine vengeance. Men and women who, although not
married
,
were living together as man and wife were ordered either to marry at once or to break off their relationship. Swearing,
playing
dice and working on the Sabbath were prohibited. No bells were to be rung at funerals, no mourning worn and there were to be no gatherings in the houses of the dead. New graveyards were opened outside the city walls and all the dead, irrespective of their standing in the city or the grandeur of their family vaults, were in future to be buried there.

The measures seem to have been successful; if not in checking the Black Death then at least in raising the moral tone of the community. Li Muisis reported that the number of people living in sin dwindled rapidly, swearing and work on the Sabbath
almost
ended, the dice manufacturers became so discouraged with their sales-figures that they turned their products into ‘round objects on which people told their Pater Nosters.’ But gratifying though this must have been, the death roll was still terrifyingly high. ‘It was strange,’ said the chronicler, that ‘the mortality was especially great among the rich and powerful.’ Strange indeed, especially since he went on to comment: ‘Deaths were more numerous about the market places and in poor, narrow streets than in broader and more spacious areas.’ There seems no reason to doubt that in Tournai, as in every other city, the rich man who remained prudently secluded had a better chance of survival than the poor man who, like it or not, was forced to live
cheek-by-jowl
with his neighbours. But his chance was not necessarily a high one: ‘… no one was secure, whether rich, in moderate circumstances or poor, but everyone from day to day waited on the will of the Lord.’

*

The Middle Ages were described by Koyré, the great historian of science, as the period of
à
peu
près
. Everything is seen through a glass darkly; though here and there it may be possible to
identify
detail with fair certainty, for the most part a bold,
impressionistic
picture is the best that can be hoped for. No more in France than in Italy can it be said what proportion of the
population
died. Gui de Chauliac spoke of three quarters, other chroniclers of half; Professor Renouard, who has studied the
subject
as closely as anyone, can do no better than estimate that the
death rate varied from an eighth to two-thirds according to the area.

But even if such details were known to us we would still be very far from understanding what the Black Death meant to medieval man. Some hazy outline of the reactions of the French emerges from the records of the chroniclers. Men seem to have taken refuge in frenetic gaiety. It was not only in Tournai that dice and lechery were the order of the day. ‘It is a curious fact,’ observed Papon,
47
‘that neither the flail of war nor of plague can reform our nation. Dances, festivals, games and tournaments continued perpetually; the French danced, one might say, on the graves of their kinsmen….’ The standards of society were
relaxed
; debauchery was common; thrift and continence forgotten; the sacred rules of property ignored; the ties of family and
friendship
denied; let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we shall die.

It is dangerously easy to allow the prejudiced records of a handful of priestly and conservative chroniclers to delude one into a vision of Europe studded with Sodoms and Gomorrahs and echoing from end to end with the rattle of dice and the laughter of tipsy courtesans. But it would be hardly less foolish to let one’s rejection of such fantasies blind one to the very real degeneracy of life during the plague. The great nobles and churchmen, the richest merchants, withdrew from the city; those who were left drank, fornicated or skulked in cellars according to their inclinations. To none of them could it have seemed likely that his life would drag on for more than a few painful weeks. With no future to await and the threat of annihilation hanging over all he cared for, how could medieval man be expected to behave with responsibility? Honesty, decency and sobriety were by no means dead but they must, at times, have been
uncommonly
hard to find. In Paris at least there had been something not far removed from a complete collapse of public and private morality. This was not the least of the penalties which the Black Death exacted from its victims.

Notes

1
De Smet, Vol. II,
Breve
Chronicon,
p. 15.

2
M. E. Lot, ‘L’état des paroisses et des feux de 1328’,
Bibliothèque
de
L’École.
de
Chartes,
Tome XC, 1929.

3
Y. Renouard,
Population,
Tome III, 1948.

4
J. R. Strayer, ‘Economic Conditions in the Country of Beaumont-le-Roger’,
Speculum,
XXVI, 1951, p.282.

5
For the best resumé of the debate see E. Carpentier and J. Glénisson, ‘La Démographie françhise en XTV
e
Siècle’,
Annales
E.S.C.,
Tome XVII, 1962, No. 1, p.109.

6
T. Wright,
Political
Poems
and
Songs
relating
to
English
History,
p.169.

7
C. Anglada,
Étude
sur
les
Maladies
Étientes,
p.432.

8
R. Emery, ‘The Black Death of 1348 in Perpignan’,
Speculum,
Vol. XLII, 1967, No. 4, p.611.

9
cit. Crawfurd,
Plague
and
Pestilence
in
Literature
and
Art,
pp.115–16.

10
De Smet, Vol. 11,
Breve
Chronicon,
pp.16–17.

11
Storie
Pistoresi,
Muratori, 11, v. p.235.

12
Die
Geschichte
der
Pest,
Giessen, 1908, p.57.

13
Y. Renouard, ‘La Peste Noire’,
Revue
de
Paris,
March 1950, p.111.

14
Knighton,
Chronicon,
R.S. 92, II, p.59.

15
See, e.g. Lea,
History
of
the
Inquisition,
Vol. I, p.290.

16
De Smet, op. cit., Vol. II, p.17.

17
op. cit., p.38, n.24 above.

18
C. Singer,
Short
History
of
Medicine,
p.69.

19
C. Singer, ‘Review of the Medical Literature of the Dark Ages’,
Proc.
Roy.
Soc.
Med.,
Vol. X, 1917, p.107.

20
Geschichte
der
Chirurgie,
Berlin, 1878, Vol. 1, p.673.

21
La
Grande
Chirurgie,
op. cit., p. 171.

22
Archiv
für
Geschichte
der
Medizin,
1910 onwards.

23
New York, 1931.

24
Bibl.
de
l’École
des
Chartes,
(1840–41), Sér. 1, Vol. 2, p.240.

25
Sudhoff, XIX, p.49.

26
Primo
de
Epydimia,
Sudhoff, V, p.43.

27
D. J. Colle,
De
Pestilentia,
Pisa, 1617, p.570.

28
Compendium
de
Epydimia,
op. cit, p. 60.

29
cit. Campbell, p.71. [Not in Sudhoff.]

30
Sudhoff XIX, pp.76–7.

31
d’Irsay,
Annals
of
Medical
History,
IX, 1927, p. 174.

32
Gentile
da
Foligno,
Sudhoff, V, p.83.

33
ed. D. W. Singer,
Proc.
Roy.
Soc.
Med.
(
Hist.
Med.
), Vol. 9, 1916, p.159.

34
ibid.

35
Siméon Luce,
Bertrand
de
Guescelin,
pp.69–73.

36
cit. H. Martin,
Histoire
de
France,
Vol. V, p.111.

37
E. Carpentier and J. Glénisson, op. cit., p.109.

38
M. Mollat, ‘La Mortalité à Paris’,
Moyen
Age,
Vol. 69, 1963, p.505.

39
‘Continuatio Chronici Guillelmi de Nangiaco’,
Soc,
de
L’Histoire
de
France,
Vol. II, 1844, pp.211–17.

40
p.169 below.

41
Black
Death,
p.55, basing himself on Géraud.

42
L. Porquet,
La
Peste
en
Normandie,
Vire, 1898, p.77.

43
Thierry,
Recueil
des
Monuments
inédits
de
L’Histoire
du
Tiers
État
, Vol. I, p.544.

44
‘Chronicon majus Aegidii li Muisis’, De Smet,
Receuil
des
Chroniques
de
Flandres,
Vol. II, p.280.

45
Y. Renouard,
Population,
Vol. III, 1948, p.459.

46
E. Carpentier, ‘Autour de la Peste Noire’, op. cit, p. 1065.

47
De
la
Peste
…, op. cit., Vol. 1. p. 123.

*
For this and subsequent extracts from
The
Canterbury
Tales
I append as a footnote Professor Coghill’s admirable rendering published by Penguin Books.

Water in rubefaction; bullock’s gall,

Arsenic, brimstone, sal ammoniac,

And herbs that I could mention by the sack,

Moonwort, valerian, agrimony and such.


God’s blessing on you, Doctor, not forgetting

Your various urinals and chamber pots,

Bottles, medicaments and cordial tots

And boxes brimming all with panaceas.

B
Y
1350, the plague in France had ended or, at least, so far abated as to make possible the holding of a Council in Paris to tighten up some of the laws against heresy. But in the meantime it had moved eastwards into Germany. Central Europe was thus
attacked
on two sides or if, as seems probable, the Black Death also advanced by land through the Balkans, on three sides more or less simultaneously. By June 1348, it had already breached the Tyrolese Alps and was at work in Bavaria, by the end of the year it had crept up the Moselle valley and was eating into North Germany.
1

In Styria, which it reached in November 1348, it seems to have been especially ferocious. According to the Neuburg Chronicle
2
even the wild animals were appalled at its depredations. ‘Men and women, driven to despair, wandered around as if mad … cattle were left to stray unattended in the fields for no one had any inclination to concern themselves about the future. The wolves, which came down from the mountains to attack the sheep, acted in a way which had never been heard of before. As if alarmed by some invisible warning they turned and fled back into the wilderness.’ In Frankfurt-am-Main, where Günther Von Schwarzburg died in the summer of 1349, two thousand people perished in seventy-two days.
3
In December 1349 the first case was recorded in Cologne. Six thousand died in Mainz, eleven thousand in Munster, twelve thousand in Erfurt.
4
Nearly seven thousand died in Bremen in four parishes alone.

Vienna was visited from the spring to the late autumn of 1349. Every day, wrote Sticker, five to six hundred people died; once nine hundred and sixty perished in a single day. A third part of the population was exterminated, says one record;
5
only a third survived says another.
6
The population identified the plague as the
Pest
Jungfrau
who had only to raise her hand to infect a victim. She flew through the air in the form of a blue
flame and, in this guise, was often seen emerging from the mouths of the dead.
7
In Lithuanian legend the same plague maiden waved a red scarf through the door or window of a house to infect its inhabitants. A gallant gentleman deliberately opened a window of his house and waited with his sword drawn till the maiden arrived. As she thrust in the scarf he chopped off her hand. He died but the rest of the village escaped unscathed and the scarf was long preserved as a relic in the local church.
8
In some areas the plague poison was believed to descend as a ball of fire. One such ball was fortunately spotted while hovering above Vienna and exorcized by a passing bishop. It fell harmlessly to the ground and a stone effigy of the Madonna was raised to
commemorate
this unique victory of the city’s defensive system.

The details of the daily horrors are very similar to those in the cities of Italy and France and there is no need to labour them again. One point of difference is the abnormally large number of churchmen who died during the epidemic. It seems indeed that the plague fell with exceptional violence on the German clergy; because, one must suppose in the absence of other explanation, of the greater fortitude with which they performed their duties. Conrad Eubel, basing his calculations almost entirely on German sources,
9
shows that at least thirty-five per cent of the higher clergy died in this period. The figure would not be exceptionally high if it related to parish priests but becomes astonishing when it applies to their normally cautious and well-protected superiors. But so far as the monks were concerned it seems that it was not only devotion to duty which led to a thinning of their ranks. Felix Fabri
10
says that in Swabia many religious houses were
deserted
: ‘For those who survived were not in the monasteries but in the cities and, having become accustomed to worldly ways of living, went quickly from bad to worse….’ The monks of Auwa are said to have moved in a body to Ulm where they dissipated the monastery’s treasure in riotous living.

For a variety of reasons, therefore, the German Church found itself short of personnel in 1349 and 1350. One result was a sharp increase in plural benefices. In one area, between 1345 and 1347, thirty-nine benefices were held by thirteen men. In 1350 to 1352 this had become fifty-seven benefices in the hands of twelve men.
Another was the closing of many monasteries and parish churches; a third the mass ordination of young and often
ill-educated
and untrained clerics. As a sum of these factors, the German Church after the Black Death was numerically weaker, worse led and worse manned than a few years before: an unlucky consequence of the losses which it had suffered by carrying out its responsibilities courageously. The many benefactions which it received during the terror ensured that its spiritual and
organizational
weakness was matched by greater financial prosperity, a disastrous combination which helped to make the church
despised
and detested where formerly it had been loved, revered or, at least, accepted. By 1350 the Church in Germany had been
reduced
to a condition where any energetic movement of reform was certain to find many allies and weakened opposition.

One by one the cities of Germany were attacked. As always, firm statistics are few and far between and, where they do exist, are often hard to reconcile with each other. Reincke
11
has
estimated
that between half and two thirds of the inhabitants of Hamburg died and seventy per cent of those in Bremen; yet in Lübeck only a quarter of the householders are recorded as having perished. Most country areas were seriously affected, yet
Bohemia
was virtually untouched. Graus
12
has suggested that this was due to Bohemia’s remoteness from the traditional trade routes yet, in the far milder epidemic of 1380, the area was ravaged by the plague. An impression is left that Germany, using the term in its widest possible sense to include Prussia, Bohemia and
Austria
, suffered less badly than France or Italy, but such an
impression
could hardly be substantiated. The Black Death in
Germany
, however, is of peculiar interest since that country provided the background for two of its most striking and
unpleasant
by-products: the pilgrimages of the Flagellants and the persecution of the Jews.

*

The Flagellant Movement,
13
even though it dislocated life over a great area of Europe and at one time threatened the security of governments, did not, in the long run, amount to very much. It might reasonably be argued that, in a book covering so
immense
a subject as the Black Death, it does not merit considered
attention. In statistical terms this might be true. But the
Flagellants
, with their visions and their superstitions, their debauches and their discipline, their idealism and their brutality, provide a uniquely revealing insight into the mind of medieval man when confronted with overwhelming and inexplicable catastrophe. Only a minority of Europeans reacted with the violence of the Flagellants but the impulses which drove this minority on were everywhere at work. To the more sophisticated the excesses of the Flagellants may have seemed distasteful; to the more prudent, dangerous. But to no one did they seem meaningless or irrelevant – that there was method in their madness was taken for granted even by the least enthusiastic. It is this, the fact that some
element
of the Flagellant lurked in the mind of every medieval man, which, more than the movement’s curious nature and intrinsic drama, justifies its consideration in some detail.

Flagellation as a practice seems to be almost as old as man himself. Joseph McCabe has pursued the subject with loving detail through the ages:
14
from the Indians of Brazil who whipped themselves on their genitals at the time of the new moon through the Spartans who propitiated the fertility goddess with blood until finally he arrived at the thirteenth and fourteenth century – the ‘Golden Age of Pious Flagellation’. Most of these
exercises
were clearly if unconsciously erotic in their nature. As such, they were far removed from the pilgrimages of the Brethren of the Cross. It would be rash to assert that the Flagellants of 1348 did not satisfy, by their self-inflicted torments, some twisted craving in their natures, but ‘erotic’, in its normal sense of awakening sexual appetites, is not a word which can properly be applied to their activities.

The practice of self-scourging as a means of mortifying the flesh seems to be first recorded in Europe in certain Italian
monastic
communities early in the eleventh century. As a group
activity
it was not known for another two hundred years. At this point, in the middle of the thirteenth century, a series of
disasters
convinced the Italians that God’s anger had been called down on man as a punishment for his sins. The idea that he might be placated if a group of the godly drew together to protest their penitence and prove it by their deeds seems first to have occurred
to a Perugian hermit called Raniero. The project was evidently judged successful, at any rate sufficiently so for the experiment to be repeated in 1334 and again a few years later, when the
pilgrimage
was led by ‘a virtuous and beautiful maid’. This last enterprise ran foul of the authorities and the maid was arrested and sentenced to be burnt at the stake. Either her virtue or her beauty, however, so far melted the hearts of her captors that she was reprieved and ultimately released.

The pilgrimage of 1260 drew its authority from a Heavenly Letter brought to earth by an angel which stated that God,
incensed
by man’s failure to observe the Sabbath day, had scourged Christendom and would have destroyed the world altogether but for the intercession of the angels and the Virgin and the
altogether
becoming behaviour of the Flagellants. Divine grace would be forthcoming for all those who became members of the Brotherhood: anybody else, it was clear, was in imminent danger of hellfire. A second edition of this letter was issued in time for the Black Death by an angel who was said to have delivered it in the Church of St Peter in Jerusalem some time in 1343.
15
The text was identical with the first except for an extra paragraph specifically pointing out that the plague was the direct
punishment
of God and that the aim of the Flagellants was to induce God to relent.

The ‘Brotherhood of the Flagellants’ or ‘Brethren of the Cross’ as the movement was called in 1348, traditionally originated in Eastern Europe, headed, according to Nohl in a pleasant conceit for which he unfortunately fails to quote authority, by various ‘gigantic women from Hungary’.
16
It is to be deplored that these heroic figures quickly faded from the scene. It was in Germany that the Flagellant movement really took root. It is hard to be sure whether this was the result of circumstances or of the nature of the inhabitants. Dr Lea suggests that the German people had had their religious sensibilities stirred by the papal interdict against Louis of Bavaria and the recent earthquakes. But, if such were the causes, there would have been quite as much reason to expect the outbreak in Italy, the original home of collective scourgings, deprived as it was of its Pope and in a mood of
striking
melancholia.

The actual mechanism of recruitment to the Brotherhood is still obscure but the appearance of the Flagellants on the march is well attested.
17
They moved in a long crocodile, two-by-two, usually in groups of two or three hundred but occasionally even more than a thousand strong. Men and women were segregated, the women taking their place towards the rear of the procession. At the head marched the group Master and two lieutenants carrying banners of purple velvet and cloth of gold. Except for occasional hymns the marchers were silent, their heads and faces hidden in cowls, their eyes fixed on the ground. They were dressed in sombre clothes with red crosses on back, front and cap.

Word would travel ahead and, at the news that the Brethren of the Cross were on the way, the bells of the churches would be set ringing and the townsfolk pour out to welcome them. The first move was to the church where they would chant their special litany. A few parish priests used to join in and try to share the limelight with the invaders, but most of them discreetly lay low until the Flagellants were on the move again. Only a handful were so high-principled or foolhardy as to deny the use of their church for the ceremony and these were usually given short shrift by the Brethren and by their own parishioners.

Sometimes the Flagellants would use the church for their own rites as well as for the litany but, provided there was a market place or other suitable site, they preferred to conduct their
service
in the open air. Here the real business of the day took place. A large circle was formed and the worshippers stripped to the waist, retaining only a linen cloth or skirt which stretched as far as their ankles. Their outer garments were piled up inside the circle and the sick of the village would congregate there in the hope of acquiring a little vicarious merit. On one occasion, at least, a dead child was laid within the magic circle – presumably in the hope of regeneration. The Flagellants marched around the circle; then, at a signal from the Master, threw themselves to the ground. The usual posture was that of one crucified but those with especial sins on their conscience adopted appropriate
attitudes
: an adulterer with his face to the ground, a perjurer on one side holding up three fingers. The Master moved among the recumbent bodies, thrashing those who had committed such
crimes or who had offended in some way against the discipline of the Brotherhood.

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