1st Edition

Pre-modern Towns at the Times of Catastrophes East Central Europe in a Comparative Perspective

216 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

216 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

216 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Covering areas in today’s Ukraine, Poland, Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, and Slovakia, this book studies the impact of both natural and human-inflicted disasters on pre-modern towns. Various kinds of catastrophes, starting with major natural disasters such as fires, floods, earthquakes, and epidemics caused high population mortality. Others, such as protracted war conflicts, were caused by human... Read more

Introduction

Michaela Antonín Malaníková, Beata Możejko, Martin Nodl

1. The destruction of the city in the interpretation of the 13th-century East Slavic letopises

Jitka Komendová

2. On the beneficial effects of storms: Examples from Hanseatic towns

Piotr Oliński

3. The Prague plague of 1380: Catastrophe and normality

Martin Nodl

4. The novel findings about the Hussite’s warfares in the Gdansk/Danzig surrounding in the late summer of 1433

Piotr Samól

5. Jakub Holub and his relatives: On the life and economic strategies of the burghers of the Brno urban region in the first half of the 15th century

Jiří Doležel

6. The 1442 fire of the Crane in the Main Town of Gdańsk: Legal and financial issues connected with maintaining fortifications in the great Prussian city in the late Middle Ages

Marcin Grulkowski

7. Did epidemics affect lives? The case of late medieval Gdańsk (Danzig)

Beata Możejko

8. Death, fire and debt: Impact on the society and economy of late medieval Warsaw

Piotr Łozowski

9. A time of catastrophes and humiliations: Lower Silesian Głogów at the end of the Middle Ages

Petr Kozák

10. Catastrophe as opportunity: Fire of Banská Bystrica (Neusohl) on 10 April 1500

Milan Georgievski

11. Prague in flames: Fire and conflagrations in the Prague conurbation from the Middle Ages to the threshold of the Modern Era

Martin Musílek

12. Natural disasters and crises in Silesian medieval chronicles

Hana Komárková

13. The fire of Lviv in 1527: A great loss or a great Renaissance?

Bogdana Petryszak

14. Bankruptcy as a family disaster? Business practices of Christian and Jewish merchants in Early Modern Prague

Marie Buňatová

Biography

Michaela Antonín Malaníková is an assistant professor of medieval history at Palacký University Olomouc. She teaches and publishes on urban history, gender history, and family history and has authored many articles and several book chapters, including in the Oxford Handbook of Medieval Central Europe 2022.

Beata Możejko is a professor at the Faculty of History at the University of Gdańsk and specialises in medieval history and the auxiliary sciences of history. She is the author of over 130 papers and articles and six monographs, including Peter von Danzig. The Story of Great Caravel 1462–1475 (2020).

Martin Nodl is part of the Centre for Medieval Studies, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague, Research Associate Professors (doc.). He is the author of over 150 articles and five monographs, including Das Kuttenberger Dekret von 1409: Von der Eintracht zum Konflikt der Prager Universitätsnationen (2017), Średniowiecze w nas (2020), and Na vlnách dějin: minulost, přítomnost a budoucnost českého dějepisectví (2020).