
audiobook
by J. F. C. (Justus Friedrich Carl) Hecker
A nineteenth‑century scholar of medicine brings his keen eye for history to life, offering a richly detailed look at two of Europe’s most baffling calamities. Drawing on his own family’s legacy of medical research, the author weaves together scientific observation, cultural context, and personal narrative to make the past feel immediate and vivid.
In the first part, the devastating wave of the Black Death is examined not merely as a disease but as a planetary upheaval. The writer describes how climate, geography and even the “sultry dryness of the atmosphere” seemed to conspire with the pestilence, while also chronicling the human toll on towns, farms and the fragile social order. His careful balance of medical insight and storytelling invites listeners to grasp the enormity of the catastrophe without needing a specialist background.
The companion study of the “Dancing Mania” explores the strange, contagious bouts of frenzied movement that swept through medieval communities. By situating these episodes within the broader tapestry of belief, fear, and environmental stress, the work reveals how collective hysteria and illness intertwined. The translation preserves the original’s scholarly rigor while remaining accessible, making these historical mysteries compelling for modern ears.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (261K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1999-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1795–1850
A pioneering 19th-century German physician, he helped turn epidemics into a subject of historical inquiry, tracing how disease shaped human life and society. His best-known writings on plague, dancing mania, and other outbreaks still feel strikingly modern in their curiosity and scope.
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