The Effects of The Black Death
on the Economic and Social Life of Europe
Written
by: dropthechalupa01
http://www.planetpapers.com/Assets/1682.php
The Black Death is the name
later given to the epidemic of plague that ravaged Europe
between 1347 and 1351. The disaster affected all aspects of
life. Depopulation and shortage of labor hastened changes
already inherent in the rural economy; the substitution of wages
for labor services was accelerated, and social stratification
became less rigid. Psychological morbidity affected the arts; in
religion, the lack of educated personnel among the clergy
gravely reduced the intellectual vigor of the church.
"In less than four years the
disease carved a path of death through Asia, Italy, France,
North Africa, Spain and Normandy, made its way over the Alps
into Switzerland, and continued eastward into Hungary"
(Microsoft Bookshelf, page 1). After a brief respite, the plague
resumed, crossing the channel into England, Scotland, and
Ireland, and eventually made its way into the northern countries
of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland and even as far north as
Greenland. In other words, the plague touched almost the entire
known world.
So much death could not help
but tear economic and social structures apart. Lack of peasants
and laborers sent wages soaring, and the value of land
plummeted. For the first time in history the scales tipped
against wealthy landlords as peasants and serfs gained more
bargaining power. Without architects, masons and artisans, great
cathedrals and castles remained unfinished for hundreds of
years. Governments, lacking officials, floundered in their
attempts to create order out of chaos.
The living lost all sense of
morality and justice, and a new attitude toward the church
emerged. Medieval people could find no Divine reason for the
four-year nightmare, and dissatisfaction with the church gave
impetus to reform movements that eventually broke apart the
unity of the Catholic Church.
The plague itself was
disastrous enough, especially in the appearance of more than one
form during the same epidemic. But coming when it did was as
catastrophic as its form. The middle 14th century was not a good
time for Europe. The European economy was already in
difficulties. It was approaching the limits of expansion, both
on its frontiers and in reclaiming land from forest and swamp.
The arrival of the Mongols and the Ottomans had disrupted trade
routes, and certain areas of Europe were edging into depression.
"The Church was in poor
shape as well. The popes resided at Avignon, not at Rome, to the
scandal of many. Heresy could be found in England and Bohemia
and southern France, and the Church seemed unable to control it
(Encyclopedia Britannica, p.58)."
The Holy Land had been lost
in the 1290s and efforts to recover it had been dismal failures.
The Black Death exacerbated the difficulties created by war and
a constricted economy. There is a relationship here, of course.
The effects of the plague were made worse because of these other
problems. And the problems themselves were redoubled because of
the plague.
Another major problem was
the Jewish population. In village after village, the common
people laid the blame of the plague at the feet of the Jews.
Hundreds of Jews were accused of poisoning wells and put to the
question, medieval code for torture, and burned. Despite this,
the Jews were also provided- by Casimir the Great of Poland-
protection from pogroms and ritual murders at the hands of the
Christians. When the Black Death raged through the German lands
between 1348 and 1352, over 300 Jewish communities were either
destroyed or expelled from their homelands.
The Black Death changed the
demography of Europe substantially. Aside from the Plague
deaths, there was also a decline in the birth rate. The net
result was that by 1400, Europe's population was half what it
had been in 1345. This is known with some accuracy from the many
Medieval church, census, and tax records that have survived.
Europe's population took about six generations to recover.
Cities were hit hard by the
plague. Financial business was disrupted as debtors died and
their creditors found themselves without recourse. There was
simply no one to collect from. Construction projects stopped for
a time or were abandoned altogether. Guilds lost their craftsmen
and could not replace them.
The labor shortage was very
severe, especially in the short term, and consequently, wages
rose. Because of the mortality, there was an oversupply of
goods, and so prices dropped. Between the two trends, the
standard of living rose for those still living.
The Black Death speeded up
the changes in medieval society that were already under way. The
most immediate effect of the Black Death was a shortage of
labor. Much land could no longer be cultivated. In response, the
nobles refused to continue the long common practice of gradually
eliminating serfdom by allowing the serfs to buy their freedom.
Over the centuries it had been realized by some that free
tenants were more productive than serfs, and this had led to a
gradual breakdown in the use of serfs. With the post-Plague
labor shortage, many nobles tried to reverse the process in
order to keep their land under cultivation and their income up.
Free tenants were taking advantage of the labor shortage to
demand better terms from their landlords and that the nobles
were reluctant to see their incomes reduced. Governments tried
to fix wages, but the labor shortage was irresistible. If their
feudal lords would not relent, serfs simply fled to areas where
wages were higher or land rental terms lower.
The shock of the Plague
caused many peasants to demand a restructuring of society, often
with a religious fervor. An approximation of democracy was
demanded and with it a curbing of aristocratic rights and
privileges. When these hopes for a better life were curtly
dismissed, or savagely repressed by the nobility, many commoners
rose in rebellion. The French Jacquerie of 1358, the English
Peasant's Rebellion in 1381, the Catalonian Rebellion in 1395,
and many revolts in Germany, all serve to show how seriously the
mortality had disrupted economic and social relations. "Unrest
was everywhere" (Microsoft Bookshelf, page 1).
None of the rebellions were
successful. But in the end the disintegration of the manor
system of managing agriculture began. A land rent system, with
the freedom of the peasants recognized replaced it. "This system
still exists in many parts of Europe, although the desire of
peasants to own their land eventually led, centuries later, to
migration to places like Russia, Australia, Africa, and the
Americas" (Encyclopedia Britannica, pp.58-59). There was never
enough land, and dividing it among the sons soon led to
economically untenable situations.
The higher wages and the
small manufacturing caused high inflation and commercial classes
attempted to maintain their position by getting laws passed
regulating who could enter their industries. This simply caused
unrest in the cities, as landless peasants rioted for the
opportunities now denied them. Higher wages meant that many
people had more money to spend on themselves. New industries
arose to meet the demand.
Governments also had to
adapt. Land was abandoned, rents were not paid, and tax revenue
declined. This had a drastic effect on the war, as the wages of
mercenary soldiers increased while available tax revenue
decreased by more than 50 percent. The French also suffered from
the collapse of the system of free military service as a feudal
obligation. There was fewer trained soldiers available and those
that were still around wanted a lot more money or simply had
better financial prospects doing something else.
As a result of the Plague,
the French went over to a system of paid, professional, army,
something the English had been doing for a long time. Coming at
a time when taxes were lower than previously, this led to
smaller armies.
The post-Plague world was
one of vastly increased opportunity for inventive and capable
individuals. While the Black Death killed off medieval society,
it gave birth to the beginnings of our own industrialized
consumer society.
Bibliography
Microsoft Bookshelf for Windows 95. "The
Black Death". 1992. Page 1.
Internet. Yahoo. October 2, 1998. Address:
http://www.discovery.com.
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