The Medieval Podcast

Patterns of Plague with Lori Jones

Apr 2, 2026
Lori Jones, historian of disease and the environment, explores how plague writings changed across medieval and early modern Europe. She discusses where tracts were found and copied, shifts from theory to practical prevention, printing’s role in spreading advice, surprising religious turns after the Reformation, and how blame and politics shaped narratives about contagion.
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INSIGHT

Early Authors Were University Physicians

  • The earliest plague treatises were mostly written by university-trained physicians around the Mediterranean.
  • Native English medical authors appear much later due to limited English university medical training.
INSIGHT

Shift From Theory To Practical Guidance

  • From the late 14th century treatises shifted from theory to practical guidance focused on prevention and cure.
  • Writers criticized older works as too theoretical and promised clearer, actionable advice.
ADVICE

Practical Prevention Steps Medieval Authors Gave

  • To avoid plague, cover mouth and nose, avoid contagious people and foul-smelling places, and maintain healthy habits.
  • Medieval advice emphasized diet, sleep, exercise, hygiene, and environmental avoidance as primary prevention.
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