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Category: Podcast

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Ep. 13: The World War, refugees, and the long history of epidemics

  • November 9, 2021
Our last episode is a special one. We first join Dr. Doina Anca Cretu to explore some facets of a terrible humanitarian and health crisis that took place in a war-torn Europe during World War...

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Ian Hathaway
  • Podcast

Ep. 12: Erasmus on fear, plague and prudence

  • June 23, 2021
In our twelfth episode, Professor Brian Cummings shares with us a letter written by the famous Dutch humanist Desiderius Erasmus (c. 1466-1536). In 1500, an outbreak of plague in Paris forced Erasmus to flee to...

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Experiencing Epidemics
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Ep. 11: The Plague in Mumbai and Vienna (1897-1898)

  • April 16, 2021
‘I thought Herr Hofrat would approve of my decision and I am convinced that nobody will be casting another stone at our clinic when they hear that I have voluntarily self-isolated along with the nurses...

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Experiencing Epidemics
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Ep. 10: The travels and transformations of John of Burgundy’s Plague Tract

  • February 26, 2021
In our tenth episode, Dr. Lori Jones explores John of Burgundy’s Plague Tract’s travels and transformations. This text was one of the most famous and influential plague treaties of the Middle Ages, though we know...

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Experiencing Epidemics
  • Podcast

Ep. 9: Plague hospitals and disease control in Renaissance Venice

  • February 1, 2021
In our ninth episode, Dr. Jane Stevens Crawshaw guides our reading of Rocco Benedetti’s Accounts of some events taking place in Venice during the plague years of 1576-1577. The text is a first-hand account of...

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Experiencing Epidemics
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Ep. 8: Plague and civil war in Renaissance Europe

  • January 18, 2021
In our eighth episode, Dr. Clément Godbarge explores the writings of Filippo Cavriana, a sixteenth-century Italian physician and spy who worked at the court of France for many years. What was the nature of the...

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Experiencing Epidemics
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Ep. 7: Ottoman experiences of epidemics

  • December 21, 2020
What do the travelogue of an eighteenth-century Ottoman ambassador and the reflections of a seventeenth-century dervish from Istanbul have in common? They both provide precious insights into Ottoman experiences of epidemics at home and abroad,...

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Experiencing Epidemics
  • Podcast

Ep. 6: Jesuit Reductions and epidemics in Brazil

  • December 4, 2020
When the Covid-19 pandemic reached Brazil, it soon became clear that the virus was not as democratic as some had first imagined. At the very beginning, the ones who were infected the most were the...

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Experiencing Epidemics
  • Podcast

Ep. 5: Epidemic, fear and vampirism in early modern Europe

  • November 20, 2020
Between 1725 and 1735, Michael Ranft, a Lutheran clergyman born in Saxony, published a book titled De masticatione mortuorum in tumulis (Concerning the dead who chew in their graves), the German edition of which bears...

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Experiencing Epidemics
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Ep. 4: Running a retirement home through an epidemic

  • November 6, 2020
The places probably hit the hardest by the first wave of the Covid-19-pandemic, have been retirement and nursing homes. In Britain, the USA and Germany, for example, between a fifth and a staggering 60% of all Covid-related deaths have occurred in such institutions, despite accounting for a much smaller share of the overall number of Covid-infected individuals.

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Recent Posts

  • Ep. 13: The World War, refugees, and the long history of epidemics
  • Ep. 12: Erasmus on fear, plague and prudence
  • Ep. 11: The Plague in Mumbai and Vienna (1897-1898)
  • Ep. 10: The travels and transformations of John of Burgundy’s Plague Tract
  • Ep. 9: Plague hospitals and disease control in Renaissance Venice

Recent Comments

  • Doina Anca Cretu on the World War, Refugees, and the Epidemics for the Experiencing Epidemics Podcast – Unlikely Refuge? on Ep. 13: The World War, refugees, and the long history of epidemics

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