“…1 The epidemic killed tens of millions of people in Europe alone within a very short period of time (Benedictow 2004;Cohn 2002;Dols 1977;Wood, Ferrell, and DeWitte-Avina 2003). This disease initiated or enhanced social, demographic, and economic changes throughout Western Eurasia and Northern Africa (see, for example, essays by Borsch 2014, Carmichael 2014, Colet et al 2014, and Green 2014, and thus has attracted the interest of a variety of researchers for decades. In addition to its importance in shaping events hundreds of years ago, the Black Death continues to be of interest today, in part because the epidemic was caused by the same pathogen that causes modern plague, the bacterium Yersinia pestis.…”