Chaghadaid社区的兴衰:“中世纪晚期”Semirech'ye(Zhetysu)的人口增长和危机,约1248-1345年

IF 0.3 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Philip Slavin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文在“中世纪晚期危机”的背景下,分析了查格戴德时代中亚的长期人口动态——增长、下降、性别和年龄构成。它基于Semirech'ye地区(吉尔吉斯斯坦北部天山西北部)两个东叙利亚(“景教”)墓地的630块墓志的独特数据集,并得到了同一墓地的考古和骨学证据的支持。从某种意义上说,这一金石语料库确实是独一无二的,因为这是唯一幸存的数据,可以对前现代中亚人口学进行定量重建。基于“超额死亡率”方法对语料库进行的仔细分析显示,尽管短期死亡率危机频繁,很可能是由环境和政治因素共同造成的,但人口在1270年至1330年左右快速增长。由于1338年至1339年爆发的一场大瘟疫,人口增长突然停止,约四分之三的当地人口死亡,并在西欧亚大陆和北非引发了1347年至1353年的黑死病。对性别和年龄比例的分析表明,当地人口制度主要由男性主导。1338-1339年的瘟疫主要针对年轻女性,很可能是由于妊娠相关的危害;相反,在其他危机年份,成年男性更容易受到影响。这篇文章的发现被包裹在“中世纪晚期危机”的更广泛背景中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A rise and fall of a Chaghadaid community: demographic growth and crisis in ‘late-medieval’ Semirech'ye (Zhetysu), circa 1248–1345
Abstract This article analyses long-term population dynamics—growth, decline, sex- and age-composition—in Chaghadaid-era Central Asia in the context of the ‘Late-medieval Crisis’. It is based on a unique dataset of 630 epitaphs from two East Syriac (‘Nestorian') graveyards in the Semirech'ye region (Northwest Tian Shan, North Kyrgyzstan), boosted by archaeological and osteological evidence from the same graveyards. This epigraphic corpus is truly unique in the sense that this is the only surviving data that allow the undertaking of such a quantitative reconstruction of pre-modern Central Asian demography. A close analysis of the corpus, based on the ‘excess mortality’ method, reveals rapid demographic growth between circa 1270 and 1330, despite frequent short-term mortality crises, caused, most likely, by a combination of environmental and political factors. The population growth came to a sudden halt because of a major plague outbreak in 1338–1339, killing about three-quarters of the local population, and initiating what was known as the Black Death of 1347–1353 in West Eurasia and North Africa. The analysis of sex and age ratios indicates that the local population regime was heavily male-dominated. The plague of 1338–1339 targeted primarily younger women, most likely due to pregnancy-related hazards; conversely, in other crisis years, adult males were more susceptible. The findings of the article are wrapped into the wider context of the ‘Late-medieval Crisis’.
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CiteScore
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