Facebook X YouTube Instagram TikTok NetGalley

The Black Death in England (Hardback)

Journal of the Plague Years in the Fourteenth Century

Hobbies & Lifestyle > Medicine & Health P&S History > By Century > 14th Century P&S History > Reference P&S History > Social History World History > Europe World History > UK & Ireland > England

By Kathryn Warner
Imprint: Pen & Sword History
Pages: 208
Illustrations: 20 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781036104924
Published: 30th May 2025

in_stock

£17.60 Introductory Offer

RRP £22.00

Note: If you have previously requested any release reminder emails for this product to the email address entered above, then the choice you make now about which format(s) of the product you wish to be reminded about will replace the choice you made last time.
You'll be £17.60 closer to your next £10.00 credit when you purchase The Black Death in England. What's this?
+£4.99 UK Delivery or free UK delivery if order is over £40
(click here for international delivery rates)

Need a currency converter? Check XE.com for live rates



We have all heard of the Black Death and how it scythed its way through England and the rest of Europe in the late 1340s, and we hear that a third or perhaps even half of the entire English population died in this terrible pandemic. However the numbers are so vast that the victims become little more than statistics. They blur into a kind of unreality, a mute testimony to a catastrophe beyond imagination or comprehension.

The Black Death in England aims to rectify this by giving names to some of the people who died in the fourteenth-century epidemics of the Plague Years and recognises those who lived through it, recreating something of their lives and what they went through.

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

Kathryn Warner’s account of the Black Death is a compelling and often upsetting read. She brings the unimaginable reality onto stark life with reference to real families and the tragedies they suffered. Given that there are very few written records of the time, I can only imagine that her research has been both challenging and extensive. I’ve enjoyed her approach to this heartbreaking story. The scene is initially set pre plague in the first months of 1348. Edward III is monarch and Britain is at war with France. Chaucer was a child and the detail about a select few individuals gives real texture to the setting. The rest of the book considers the plague county by county with family stories recounted in convincing and, I’m sure, authentic detail. As awful as it was, it’s the first time I’ve read a book about the Black Death that really hits home. I felt as if I got to know some of those affected and shared their distress and sense of fear as the inevitable hit. It’s an incredible slice of social history, not only about the pestilence, but about England through those years and the structural set up of the counties. There are numerous photos at the end of the narrative, a comprehensive index with so many family names, I’d think this is of interest to those involved in family history. The bibliography of primary and secondary sources gives much further reading. A compelling and remarkable read.

NetGalley, Anita Wallas

About Kathryn Warner

Kathryn Warner holds a BA and an MA with Distinction in medieval history and literature from the University of Manchester, and is the author of biographies about Edward II and his queen Isabella. Kathryn has had work published in the English Historical Review, has given a paper at the International Medieval Congress, and appeared in a BBC documentary.

More titles by Kathryn Warner

Other titles in Pen & Sword History...