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The effect of sex on risk of mortality during the Black Death in London, A.D. 1349-1350

by Medievalists.net
August 12, 2012

The effect of sex on risk of mortality during the Black Death in London, A.D. 1349-1350

By Sharon DeWitte

American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Vol.139:2 (2009)

Abstract: The Black Death of 1347-1351 was one of the most devastating epidemics in human history, and though it is frequently assumed that the epidemic killed indiscriminately, recent research suggests that the disease was selective, at least with respect to frailty. The purpose of this study is to determine whether the Black Death was similarly selective with respect to biological sex-that is, did either sex face an elevated risk during the epidemic or were men and women at equal risk of dying? A sample of 298 victims of the Black Death, from the East Smithfield cemetery in London, is compared to a pre-Black Death normal mortality sample of 194 individuals from two Danish urban cemeteries, St Mikkel Church (Viborg) and St Albani Church (Odense). To assess the effect of sex on risk of death, sex is modeled as a covariate affecting the Gompertz-Makeham model of adult mortality. The results suggest that sex did not strongly affect risk of death in either the normal mortality or Black Death samples. These results are important for improving our understanding of Black Death mortality patterns. This is essential for understanding the effects the Black Death had on European populations, and the methods used here can potentially be informatively applied to investigations of other episodes of epidemic diseases in past populations.

Click here to read this article from Academia.edu

Click here to read more about the Black Death

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Related Posts

  • Selectivity of Black Death mortality with respect to preexisting health
  • Stature and frailty during the Black Death: the effect of stature on risks of epidemic mortality in London, A.D. 1348-1350
  • The Paleodemography of the Black Death 1347-1351
  • Age Patterns of Mortality During the Black Death in London, A.D. 1349-1350
  • Mortality Risk and Survival in the Aftermath of the Medieval Black Death
TagsBlack Death • Disease • Fifteenth Century • London in the Middle Ages • Medieval England • Medieval Medicine • Medieval Social History

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