Property:Summary
From EpiMedDat
- Has type"Has type" is a predefined property that describes the <a href="/Special:Types" title="Special:Types">datatype</a> of a property and is provided by <a class="external text" href="https://www.semantic-mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Special_properties">Semantic MediaWiki</a>.: Text
- Has preferred property label"Preferred property label" is a declarative predefined property to specify a <a class="external text" href="https://www.semantic-mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Preferred_property_label">preferred property label</a> and is provided by <a class="external text" href="https://www.semantic-mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Special_properties">Semantic MediaWiki</a>.: Summary (en)
- Has property description"Property description" is a predefined property that allows to describe a property in context of a language and is provided by <a class="external text" href="https://www.semantic-mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Special_properties">Semantic MediaWiki</a>.: Summary of the disease event (en)
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During the [[plague]] was the [[flagellants]] movement, [[jews]] were killed in [[Frankfurt]] and [[Mainz]] and the [[jews]] burned down the roof of a church in [[Frankfurt]] +
A friend of Francesco Petraca, Paganino da Bizzozzero and his his entire family died because of the [[plague]] in [[Parma]] +
A plague lasting from Penthecost (May 31st) until the feast of St Michael (September 29th) killed about two thirds of the population of [[Austria]]. +
Letter from [[Francesco Petrarca]] to his friend Ludwig van Kempen in [[Avignon]] about the [[plague]] in [[Italy]] in 1348 (mentioning an [[Earthquake]] +
The [[Black Death]] comes to [[Strasbourg]], kills 16.000 people and [[Jews]] are persecuted in its aftermath. +
With the spreading of the [[plague]] in [[Germany]], simultaneously the [[Flagellants]] movement arose. In the middle of June, 700 of them came to [[Strasbourg]]. +
The hostilities between the kings of England and France were postponed because of a severe [[plague]] +
Outbreak of the [[Black Death]] in [[Strasbourg]] with 16.000 vicitms, a detailed description of [[symptoms]] and course of the disease. The dating of the epidemic is parallel to the presence of [[flagellants]] in the city +
200 [[flagellants]] arrived in [[Strasbourg]] and made their typical [[procession]]s. +
Outbreak of the [[Black Death]] in [[Frankfurt]] with 2000 people dead and a duration of seven months. [[Jews]] were burned troughout [[Germany]] +
The governor (nāʾib) of Aleppo, Sayf al-Dīn Quṭlīshā, died. News of his death reached [[Damascus]] in the beginning of Jumādā II (August 17 to September 14, 1349). Many people rejoiced at his death given his misconduct in [[Hama]] during the [[plague]] (ṭāʿūn) (before he became governor of Aleppo). It was reported that he had enriched himself on the inheritance of the deceased. +
Letter from [[Francesco Petrarca]] to his friend Ludwig van Kempen in which he mentions the [[plague]] breaking out again in [[Carpi]] +
Two men announce that [[Olaf Peterssön]] had received from [[Jon Vigleikssön]] 54 marks in current coins for 12 [[öresbol]] in the estate [[Faluvold]] that was bought for the altar of [[St Sebastian]] in [[St Halvard]]'s church in [[Oslo]] +
Prohibition of demolition of vacant houses in [[Orvieto]] after the [[Black Death]], except for renovation and expansion +
An entry in the town book of [[Brno]] (of 1351 July 16) states that a certain Nicolaus died in the preceeding year in the times of the [[plague]]. +
Extreme weather and abundant rainfall in 1350 and the following winter was cold until beginning of February. From that on stopped the epidemic. +
[[Black Death]] in [[Denmark]] and "universally". It has been speculated (see Ulsig, Pest og befolkningsnedgang, p. 22) that the plague reached Denmark already in 1348 +
[[Black Death]] around the world. [[Jubilee]] year and [[indulgence]] in [[Rome]] +
The dying by the [[Black Death]] ends, but now the [[jews]] were burned in [[Germany]] because they were accused of [[poison]]ing the [[Christians]]. +
[[Inscription]] about a epidemic with 3000 death. +
