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Article

From Tian Shan to Crimea: Dynamics of Plague Spread during the Early Stages of the Black Death, 1338-46

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Citation

Slavin P (2023) From Tian Shan to Crimea: Dynamics of Plague Spread during the Early Stages of the Black Death, 1338-46. Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 66 (5-6), pp. 513-627. https://brill.com/view/journals/jesh/66/5-6/article-p513_1.xml?ebody=full%20html-copy1

Abstract
The present paper aims to reconstruct tentative ways, in which the Black Death (the first wave of the Second Plague Pandemic) spread from its now-established home in the Tian Shan region to Western Eurasia between c.1338/41 and 1346. On the basis of all the available evidence¡ªtextual, palaeogenetic, archaeological, topographic, numismatic and palaeoclimatalogical¡ªthe article argues for two phases of the plague spread: (1) the slow phase of c.1338/41¨C45, hindered by political and commercial crises in the Mongol Empire, but especially the Chaghadaid khanate, as well as by local environmental conditions and (2) the fast phase of 1345¨C6, once the plague reached the territories of the Golden Horde. As it will be argued, commercial networks, both long-distance and local, across long-distance trade routes (so-called ¡®Silk Roads¡¯) played a paramount role in facilitating the spread of the plague. Although not claiming to have solved the mystery of the westbound plague spread, the paper aims to provide a first full-scale study of this kind, raising new research questions and forming a starting point for future research.

Keywords
Black Death; Central Asia; the Tian Shan; Chaghadaid khanate; international trade; Silk Roads; environmental history

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2023
Publication date online30/06/2023
Date accepted by journal23/02/2023
URL
Publisher URL
ISSN0022-4995
eISSN1568-5209

People (1)

Professor Philip Slavin

Professor Philip Slavin

Professor, History

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