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    "title": "The Black Death and What Followed: Labor, Power, and the Medieval Mind",
    "content": "## The Scale of the Catastrophe\n\nThe Black Death (1347-1351) killed approximately 30-60% of Europe's population within a period of roughly four years. Some regions lost more: parts of Italy, the low countries, and some coastal trading cities experienced mortality rates above 60%. Rural areas that were less connected to trade routes sometimes lost less.\n\nNo event in European history has had a comparable demographic impact in such a short time.\n\n## The Economic Logic: Labor Becomes Scarce\n\nWhen labor is abundant relative to land, landowners have power. When labor is scarce, workers have power. The Black Death dramatically, suddenly, and irreversibly shifted this relationship.\n\nSurviving peasants could demand higher wages, better working conditions, and the end or loosening of serfdom. Many did. The result was not uniform — landowners in Eastern Europe responded by legally *tightening* serfdom (the Second Serfdom), while in Western Europe the feudal labor system gradually dissolved — but the economic logic of scarcity worked in favor of survivors.\n\nThe Peasants' Revolt in England (1381) came three decades after the Black Death. Its proximate cause was a poll tax, but its deeper cause was that surviving peasants had gained enough economic leverage to find legally-sanctioned subjugation intolerable.\n\n## The Psychological and Cultural Impact\n\nThe Black Death produced an obsession with death in European culture that persisted for generations. The *Danse Macabre* (Dance of Death) motif — depicting skeletons leading people of all social ranks to their graves — appeared in art and literature across the continent.\n\nMore practically, the Church's authority suffered. Priests died at the same rate as everyone else. Prayer didn't stop plague. The Church's explanations (divine punishment for sin) couldn't be easily reconciled with the indiscriminate death of the innocent alongside the guilty. This didn't immediately produce the Reformation, but it contributed to a slow erosion of institutional religious authority.\n\n## The Demographic Recovery\n\nIt took roughly 150 years for European population to recover to pre-plague levels. This wasn't simply because plague recurred (it did, regularly throughout the 14th-17th centuries), but because demographic recovery is slow even in favorable conditions.\n\nThe economic and social changes that the plague accelerated — the dissolution of serfdom, the rise of paid labor, the emergence of a more mobile workforce — were mostly irreversible even as population recovered. The world that came after was structurally different from the world before.\n\nThis is one of history's clearest examples of a catastrophic event not merely causing temporary disruption, but permanently reshaping the social order.",
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    "created_at": "2026-05-12 14:04:01",
    "updated_at": "2026-05-12 14:04:01",
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