Climate and Disease in Medieval Eurasia

Monica H. Green
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

When the first hominins and their successors migrated north from Africa into Eurasia, they created a new, interlinked disease environment. They brought some diseases, such as malaria, with them from Africa, and newly encountered others, such as plague, in Eurasia. Regional changes in climate played a role in human health, not simply due to their influence in determining the success of year-to-year harvests and grazing lands, but also because periods of warming or severe and sudden cooling shifted the interactions between humans and the flora and fauna that made up their environment. Exchanges of disease between the two continents would continue up through the medieval era. Whereas vast distances and low population density likely shielded Eurasian populations from frequent epidemic outbreaks up through the Neolithic period, by the beginning of the common era, with its vastly intensified trade networks, Eurasia would begin to see a new phenomenon: pandemics, including the Justinianic Plague and the Black Death, the largest mortality events in human history. The diseases of medieval Eurasia are still among the world’s leading infectious killers and causes of debilitating morbidity. Because they have all persisted to the present day (with the exception of smallpox), modern science plays an important role in their historical reconstruction.
中世纪欧亚大陆的气候与疾病
当第一批人类和他们的后继者从非洲向北迁移到欧亚大陆时,他们创造了一个新的、相互关联的疾病环境。他们从非洲带来了一些疾病,如疟疾,并在欧亚大陆新遇到了其他疾病,如瘟疫。气候的区域变化对人类健康起着重要作用,这不仅是因为它们影响着每年的收成和放牧地的成功与否,而且还因为变暖或严重和突然变冷的时期改变了人类与构成其环境的动植物之间的相互作用。两大洲之间的疾病交流一直持续到中世纪。虽然在新石器时代,遥远的距离和低的人口密度可能使欧亚人口免于频繁的流行病爆发,但在共同时代开始时,随着其贸易网络的广泛加强,欧亚大陆将开始出现一种新的现象:流行病,包括查士丁尼瘟疫和黑死病,这是人类历史上死亡率最高的事件。中世纪欧亚大陆的疾病仍然是世界上主要的传染性杀手和致残致残原因之一。因为它们都延续到今天(天花除外),现代科学在它们的历史重建中起着重要作用。
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