EpiMedDat
The Open Data Collection for Historical Epidemics and Medieval Diseases

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The plague was transmitted to Halland in [[Denmark]], where it erupted in the autumn of 1349 in the port of [[Halmstad]]. King Magnus IV calls upon the population of [[Linköping]] to visit the mass, go to confession, give alms to the poor and the Church, and fast to keep the great plague away  +
The [[Black Death]] strikes [[Limburg]], but also [[Mainz]] and [[Cologne]]. In Limburg, the disease killed 2.400 people. From the fear of the [[plague]] arose the [[flagellants]] movement. A long description of the flagellants movement and their behaviour and rituals follows this source passage.  +
Arrival of the [[Black Death]] to [[Norway]] in [[1349]].  +
Arival of the [[Black Death]] to [[Norway]] via a cog from [[England]] in [[1349]]. Two-thirds of the population in [[Norway]] die, among others the archbishop of [[Nidaros]] and the bishops of [[Bergen]], [[Stavanger]] and [[Hamar]]. It is explicitly stated that the [[plague]] did not reach [[Iceland]]  +
After referring to the spreading of the Black Death in the entry for 1348, Jan Dlugos adds that in 1349 the Black Death reached Poland. After it had killed many people, the remaining took to religious practices and humiliated themselves through flaggelation and other treatments until God had mercy with them.  +
In this year there was a great pestilence and people flagellated themselves  +
After writing for several chapters about the way of the Black Death over Europe and of the manifestations of the disease, the chronicler adds that it also raged in Prussia and Pomerania  +
[[Plague]] in [[Strasbourg]]  +
Greatest death ever in all over the world, which was followed by a burning of the [[jews]] and the [[flagellants]] movement.  +
Great [[mortality]] all over the world. In [[Marseille]] died more the half of the people. In the [[summer]] the [[plague]] arrived in [[Strasbourg]] and 16 thousend people died. The [[Jews]] were blamed for poisoning the water, which brought the plague. As a consequence they were burned in Strasbourg and other cities along the [[Rhine]].  +
Great dying in [[Strasbourg]] was simultaneously with the [[flagellants]] procession. Also about the burial traditions during and after the [[plague]]  +
An undated prophecy by [[Birgitta of Sweden]] about the [[monks]] of the Swedish monastery of [[Alvastra]]. According to [[Tryggve Lundén]] it is to be set between 1344-49. The revelation if followed by the note that a disease came and took away 33 brothers  +
Outbreak of the [[Black Death]] and other disesases, maybe [[dysentery]] and [[fever]] - all blamed on the [[Jews]]. Unusual [[symptoms]] of plague.  +
Outbreak of the [[Black Death]] in [[Zwiefalten]].  +
On January 27, [[1349]], the [[Friday]] preacher Tāj al-Dīn ʿAbd al-Raḥīm al-Qazwīnī died of [[plague]] in [[Damascus]] after two days of illness. The members of his household were infected, too; his brother Ṣadr al-Dīn ʿAbd al-Karīm died soon afterwards.  +
In [[Strasbourg]], three leaders were expelled after the city granted protection to the [[Jews]]. Accusations arose that Jews had poisoned wells, leading to to torture, and persecutions. Around 2,000 Jews were burned, except those who converted to Christianity. This event coincided with the rise of the [[Flagellants|flagellant]] movement and a severe outbreak of [[plague]].  +
Three canons in [[Oslo]] announce that [[Bothild Arnesdatter]] ceded 12 öresbol (landed property with the rental value of 12 öre per year) in [[Faluvold]] in [[Nes]] Parish in [[Romerike]] to her husband [[Olaf Peterssön]] in order to go on a [[pilgrimage]] to [[Rome]]. [[Peterssön]] in turn sold the estate to the newly built [[St Sebastian]]'s Altar in [[St Halvards ]] Church in [[Oslo]]  +
In the year 750 H (March 22, [[1349]] to March 10, [[1350]]), the number of [[plague]] infections in [[Damascus]] greatly declined. The number of deceased people with taxable inheritance which the Office of Inheritances (dīwān al-mawārīth) recorded was ca. 20 for 750 H while it had been 500 for 749 H (April 1, 1348 to March 21, 1349). [[Plague]] did not yet disappear entirely, though: on March 25, 1349, the jurist Shihāb al-Dīn Aḥmad b. al-Thiqa, his son and his brother all died of [[plague]] within one hour. They were buried in one grave.  +
Outbreak of the [[Black Death]] in [[Frankfurt]] accompanied by supplicatory [[procession]]s and the presence of [[flagellants]].  +
Outbreak of the [[Black Death]] in [[Frankfurt]] until early [[1350]].  +
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