Jebwab, Remi and Johnson, Noel D and Koyama, Mark (2017): Negative Shocks and Mass Persecutions: Evidence from the Black Death.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_77720.pdf Download (470kB) | Preview |
Abstract
In this paper we study the Black Death persecutions (1347-1352) against Jews in order to shed light on the factors determining when a minority group will face persecution. We develop a theoretical framework which predicts that negative shocks increase the likelihood that minorities are scapegoated and persecuted. By contrast, as the shocks become more severe, persecution probability may actually decrease if there are economic complementarities between the majority and minority groups. We compile city- level data on Black Death mortality and Jewish persecution. At an aggregate level we find that scapegoating led to an increase in the baseline probability of a persecution. However, at the city-level, locations which experienced higher plague mortality rates were less likely to engage in persecutions. Furthermore, persecutions were more likely in cities with a history of antisemitism (consistent with scapegoating) and less likely in cities where Jews played an important economic role (consistent with inter-group complementarities).
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Negative Shocks and Mass Persecutions: Evidence from the Black Death |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Ethnic Conflict; Religious Conflict; Minorities; Persecutions; Massacres; Libels; Black Death; Jewish Economic History; Middle Ages; Epidemics; Cities; Trade |
Subjects: | D - Microeconomics > D7 - Analysis of Collective Decision-Making > D74 - Conflict ; Conflict Resolution ; Alliances ; Revolutions J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J1 - Demographic Economics > J15 - Economics of Minorities, Races, Indigenous Peoples, and Immigrants ; Non-labor Discrimination N - Economic History > N3 - Labor and Consumers, Demography, Education, Health, Welfare, Income, Wealth, Religion, and Philanthropy > N33 - Europe: Pre-1913 N - Economic History > N4 - Government, War, Law, International Relations, and Regulation N - Economic History > N4 - Government, War, Law, International Relations, and Regulation > N43 - Europe: Pre-1913 O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O1 - Economic Development R - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics > R1 - General Regional Economics Z - Other Special Topics > Z1 - Cultural Economics ; Economic Sociology ; Economic Anthropology > Z12 - Religion |
Item ID: | 77720 |
Depositing User: | Mark Koyama |
Date Deposited: | 21 Mar 2017 17:36 |
Last Modified: | 26 Sep 2019 20:31 |
References: | Aberth, John, From the Brink of the Apocalypse: Confronting Famine, War, Plague, and Death in the Later Middle Ages, London: Routledge, 2009. Acemoglu, Daron and James A. Robinson, Why Nations Fail, New York: Crown Business, 2012. Acemoglu, Daron, David H. Autor, and David Lyle, “Women, War, and Wages: The Effect of Female Labor Supply on the Wage Structure at Midcentury,” Journal of Political Economy, June 2004, 112 (3), 497–551. Acemoglu, Daron, Tarek A. Hassan, and James A. Robinson, “Social Structure and Development: A Legacy of the Holocaust in Russia,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2011, 126 (2), 895–946. Adena, Maja, Ruben Enikolopov, Maria Petrova, Veronica Santarosa, and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya, “Radio and the Rise of The Nazis in Prewar Germany,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2015, 130 (4), 1885–1939. Adler, Cyrus and Isidore Singer, eds, The Jewish Encyclopedia Funk and Wagnalls New York 1906. Alesina, Alberto and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya, “Segregation and the Quality of Government in a Cross Section of Countries,” American Economic Review, August 2011, 101 (5), 1872–1911. Alesina, Alberto and Eliana La Ferrara, “Ethnic Diversity and Economic Performance,” Journal of Economic Literature, September 2005, 43 (3), 762–800. Alesina, Alberto, Reza Baqir, and William Easterly, “Public Goods and Ethnic Divisions*,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1999, 114 (4), 1243. Alesina, Alberto, Stelios Michalopoulos, and Elias Papaioannou, “Ethnic Inequality,” Journal of Political Economy, 2016, 124 (2), 428–488. Allcott, Hunt and Matthew Gentzkow, “Social Media and Fake News in the 2016 Election,” NBER Working Papers 23089, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc January 2017. Allen, Robert C., “The Great Divergence in European Wages and Prices from the Middle Ages to the First World War,” Explorations in Economic History, 2001, 38, 411–447. Allport, G. W., The Nature of Prejudice, Cambridge, MA: Perseus Books, 1979. Anderson, R. Warren, Noel D. Johnson, and Mark Koyama, “Jewish Persecutions and Weather Shocks 1100–1800,” Economic Journal, 2016, Forthcoming. Arbath, Cemal Eren, Quamrul H. Ashraf, and Oded Galor, “The Nature of Conflict,” CESifo Working Paper Series 5486, CESifo Group Munich 2015. Arbatli, Cemal Eren, Quamrul H. Ashraf, and Oded Galor, “The Nature of Conflict,” NBER Working Papers 21079, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc April 2015. Archer, John, “The Structure of Anti-Semitism in the ”Prioress’s Tale”,” The Chaucer Review, 1984, 19 (1), 46–54. Bai, Ying and James Kai-sing Kung, “Climate Shocks and Sino-nomadic Conflict,” The Review of Economics and Statistics, August 2011, 93 (3), 970–981. Bairoch, Paul, Cites and Economic Development, from the dawn of history to the present, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988. translated by Christopher Braider. Bandiera, Oriana and Gilat Levy, “Diversity and the power of the elites in democratic societies: Evidence from Indonesia,” Journal of Public Economics, 2011, 95 (11), 1322–1330. Baron, Salo, A Social and Religious History of the Jews, Vol. XI: Citizen or Alien Conjurer, New York: Columbia University Press, 1967. Becker, Sascha O. and Luigi Pascali, “Religion, Division of Labor and Conflict: Anti-Semiticsm in German Regions over 600 Years,” Technical Report 288, Centre for Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy April 2016. Behar, Doron M., Bayazit Yunusbayev, Mait Metspalu, Ene Metspalu, Saharon Rosset, Ju ̈ Parik, Siiri Rootsi, Gyaneshwer Chaubey, Ildus Kutuev, Guennady Yudkovsky, Elza K. Khusnutdinova, Oleg Balanovsky, Ornella Semino, Luisa Pereira, David Comas, David Gurwitz, Batsheva Bonne-Tamir, Tudor Parfitt, Michael F. Hammer, Karl Skorecki, and Richard Villems, “The genome- wide structure of the Jewish people,” Nature, Jul 08 2010, 466 (7303), 238–42. Ben-Sasson, Haim Hillel, Yehuda Slutsky, and Dina Porat, “Blood Libel,” in Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik, eds., Encyclopedia Judaica, Vol. 17 Macmillan Reference New York 2007, pp. 774–780. Benedictow, Ole J., The Black Death 1346–1353: The Complete History, Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2005. Benedictow, Ole J., What Disease was Plague? On the Controversy over the Microbiological Identity of Plague Epidemics of the Past, Leiden: Brill, 2010. Berenbaum, Michael and Fred Skolnik, Encyclopedia Judaica, 2nd ed., USA: Macmillan Reference, 2007. Berenbaum, Michael and Fred Skolnik, “Nuremberg,” in Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik, eds., Encyclopaedia Judaica, Vol. 15 Macmillan Reference 2007, pp. 346–348. Berngruber, Thomas W., Rmy Froissart, Marc Choisy, and Sylvain Gandon, “Evolution of Virulence in Emerging Epidemics,” PLoS Pathog, 03 2013, 9 (3), 1–8. Biraben, Jean-Noe ̈l, La Peste dans l’Histoire: Les Hommes et la Peste en France et dans les Pays Europe ́ens et Me ́diterrane ́ens, Vol. I, Mouton, Paris, 1975. Blumenkranz, Bernhard, David Weinberg, and Georges Levitte, “Toulouse,” in Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik, eds., Encyclopaedia Judaica, Vol. 20 Macmillan Reference New York 2007, pp. 73–74. Boccaccio, Giovanni, The Decameron, London: Dodo Press, 2005, 1371. Translated by J.M. Rigg. Boerner, Lsrs and Battista Severgnini, “Epidemic Trade,” 2014. LSE Economic History Working Paper No. 212/2014. Bosker, Maarten, Eltjo Buringh, and Jan Luiten van Zanden, “From Baghdad to London: unravelling urban development in Europe and the Arab world 800-1800,” Review of Economics and Statistics, 2013, 95 (4), 1418–1437. Botticini, Maristella, “A Tale of ’Benevolent’ Governments: Private Credit Markets, Public Finance, and the Role of Jewish Lenders in Medieval and Renaissance Italy,” Journal of Economic History, 2000, 60, 164–189. Botticini, Maristella, and Zvi Eckstein, The Chosen Few, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2012. Campbell, Bruce M.S., The Great Transition: Climate, Disease and Society in the Late-Medieval World, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016. Caselli, Francesco and Wilbur John Coleman II, “On The Theory Of Ethnic Conflict,” Journal of the European Economic Association, 01 2013, 11, 161–192. Caselli, Francesco, Massimo Morelli, and Dominic Rohner, “The Geography of Interstate Resource Wars,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2015, 130 (1), 267–315. Chandler, Tertius, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth, Lewiston, NY: St David University Press, 1987. Chanes, Jerome A., Antisemitism, Denver, Colorado: Contemporary World Issues, 2004. Chaney, Eric, “Revolt on the Nile: Economic Shocks, Religion and Political Power,” Econometrica, 2013, 5 (5), 2033–2053. Chassang, Sylvain and Gerard Padro i Miquel, “Economic Shocks and Civil War,” Quarterly Journal of Political Science, October 2009, 4 (3), 211–228. Chazan, Robert, European Jewry and the First Crusade, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987. Chazan, Robert, Reassessing Jewish Life in Medieval Europe, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Christakos, George, Richardo A. Olea, Marc L. Serre, Hwa-Lung Yu, and Lin-Lin Wang, Interdisciplinary Public Health Reasoning and Epidemic Modelling: The Case of Black Death, Berlin: Springer, 2005. Chua, Amy, World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability, New York: Anchor Books, 2004. Cohen, Norman, The Pursuit of the Millenium, revolutionary millenarians and mystical anarchists of the middle ages, London: Pimilco, 1957. Cohn, Samuel K., “The Black Death and the Burning of Jews,” Past & Present, 2007, 196 (1), 3–36. Cohn, Samuel K. and Guido Alfani, “Households and Plague in Early Modern Italy,” The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2007, 38 (2), pp. 177–205. Cremieux, A., “Les Juifs de Toulon au Moyen Age et le massacre du 14 Avril 1348,” Journal of Jewish Studies, 33–72 1930, 89. D’Acunto, Francesco, Marcel Prokopczuk, and Michael Weber, “Distrust in Finance Lingers: Jewish Persecution and Households’ Investments,” June 2014. memo. de Roover, Raymond, “What is Dry Exchange? A Contribution to the Study of English Mercantilism,” The Journal of Political Economy, 1944, 52 (3), 250–266. de Roover, Raymond,, The Rise and Decline of the Medici Bank, 1397–1494, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1963. Dell, Melissa, “Path dependence in development: Evidence from the Mexican Revolution,” 2012. Mimeo. Doepke, Matthias, Moshe Hazan, and Yishay D. Maoz, “The Baby Boom and World War II: A Macroeconomic Analysis,” Review of Economic Studies, 2015, 82 (3), 1031–1073. Dollinger, Philippe, The German Hansa, London: MacMillan, 1970. translated and edited by D.S. Ault and S.H. Steinberg. Donaldson, Dave, “Forthcoming.“Railroads of the Raj: Estimating the impact of transportation infrastructure.”,” American Economic Review, 2017. Donaldson, Terence L., Jews and Anti-Judaism in the New Testament, Causton Street: Baylor University Press, 2010. Doob, Leonard W; Miller Neal E; Mowrer Orval Hobart; Sears Robert Dollard John;, Frustration and Aggression, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1939. Easterly, William and Ross Levine, “Africa’s Growth Tragedy: Policies and Ethnic Divisions*,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1997, 112 (4), 1203. Easterly, William, Roberta Gatti, and Sergio Kurlat, “Development, democracy, and mass killings,” Journal of Economic Growth, 2006, 11 (2), 129–156. Eidelberg, Shlomo, The Jews and the Crusades, Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1977. Enikolopov, Ruben, Maria Petrova, and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya, “Media and Political Persuasion: Evidence from Russia,” American Economic Review, December 2011, 101 (7), 3253–85. Esteban, Joan and Debraj Ray, “On the Salience of Ethnic Conflict,” American Economic Review, December 2008, 98 (5), 2185–2202. Esteban, Joan and Debraj Ray,“Linking Conflict to Inequality and Polarization,” American Economic Review, June 2011, 101 (4), 1345–1374. Esteban, Joan, Laura Mayoral, and Debraj Ray, “Ethnicity and Conflict: An Empirical Study,” American Economic Review, June 2012, 102 (4), 1310–1342. Esteban, Joan, Massimo Morelli, and Dominic Rohner, “Strategic Mass Killings,” Journal of Political Economy, 2015, 123 (5), 1087–1132. Facchini, Giovanni and Anna Maria Mayda, “Does the Welfare State Affect Individual Attitudes across Countries,” The Review of Economics and Statistics, May 2009, 91 (2), 295–314 Fernandez, Raquel, Alessandra Fogli, and Claudia Olivetti, “Preference Formation and the Rise of Women’s Labor Force Participation: Evidence from WWII,” NBER Working Papers 10589, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc June 2004. Fernandez, Raquel and Gilat Levy, “Diversity and redistribution,” Journal of Public Economics, 2008, 92 (5?6), 925 – 943. Finley, Theresa and Mark Koyama, “Plague, Politics, and Pogroms: The Black Death, Fragmented states, and the persecution of Jews in the late Holy Roman Empire,” June 2015. memo. Freudmann, Lillian C., AntiSemitism in the New Testament, Lanham: University Press of America, 1994. Friedlander, Saul, Nazi Germany and the Jews, Vol. I, New York: Harper Collins, 1997. Gensini, Gian Franco, Magdi H. Yacoub, and Andrea A. Conti, “The concept of quarantine in history: from plague to SARS,” Journal of Infection, 2004, 49 (4), 257 – 261. Girard, Rene ́, Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1978. Girvan, Michelle, Duncan S. Callaway, M. E. J. Newman, and Steven H. Strogatz, “Simple model of epidemics with pathogen mutation,” Phys. Rev. E, Mar 2002, 65, 031915. Glick, Peter, “Sacrificial Lambs Dressed in Wolves’ Clothing,” in Leonard S. Newman and Ralf Erber, eds., Understanding Genocide,, Oxford University Press Oxford 2002. Glick, Peter,, “Choice of Scapegoats,” in John F. Dovidio, Peter Glick, and Laurie A. Rudman, eds., On the Nature of Prejudice: 50 Years after Allport,, Blackwell Malden, MA 2005, pp. 244–61. Glick, Peter,, When Neighbors Blame Neighbors: Scapegoating and the Breakdown of Ethnic Relations, Blackwell Publishing Ltd., Goldhagen, Daniel, The Devil That Never Dies, New York: Little Brown and Company, 2013. Goldin, Claudia, “The Role of World War II in the Rise of Women’s Employment,” American Economic Review, September 1991, 81 (4), 741–56. Goldstein, Phyllis, A Convenient Hatred: The History of Antisemitism, Brookline, MA: Facing History and Ourselves, 2012. Gottfried, Robert S., The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe, New York: The Free Press, 1983. Gottheil, Richard and S. Kahn, “Grenoble,” in Isidore Singer, ed., Jewish Encyclopedia, 1906, pp. 91–92. Grosfeld, Irena, Alexander Rodnyansky, and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya, “Persistent Antimarket Culture: A Legacy of the Pale of Settlement after the Holocaust,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2013, 5 (3), 189–226. Grosfeld, Irena, Seyhun Orcan Sakalli, and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya, “Middleman Minorities and Ethnic Conflict: Evidence from Pogroms,” 2016. Mimeo. Herlihy, David, “Plague and Social Change in Rural Pistoia, 1201-1430,” The Economic History Review, 1965, 18 (2), 225–244. Hoover, Calvin B., “The Sea Loan in Genoa in the Twelfth Century,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1926, 40 (3), 495–529. Horrox, Rosmery, ed., The Black Death Manchester University Press Manchester 1994. Iyigun, Murat, Nathan Nunn, and Nancy Qian, “Winter is Coming: The Long-Run Effects of Climate Change on Conflict, 1400-1900,” NBER Working Papers 23033, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc January 2017. Jebwab, Remi, Noel D. Johnson, and Mark Koyama, “Bones, Bacteria and Break Points: The Heterogeneous Spatial Effects of the Black Death and Long-Run Growth,” June 2016. Working Paper. Jha, Saumitra, “Maintaining peace across ethnic lines: New lessons from the past,” Economics of Peace and Security Journal, 2007, 2 (2), 89–93. Jha, Saumitra, “Trade, complementaries and religious tolerance: evidence from India,” American Journal of Political Science, 2013, 107 (4). Johnson, Noel D. and Mark Koyama, “Jewish Communities and City Growth in Preindustrial Europe,” Journal of Development Economics, 2017, Forthcoming. Koınig, Michael, Dominic Rohner, Mathias Thoenig, and Fabrizio Zilibotti, “Networks in Conflict: Theory and Evidence from the Great War of Africa,” CEPR Discussion Papers 10348, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers January 2015. Koyama, Mark, “Evading the ‘Taint of Usury’: The usury prohibition as a barrier to entry,” Explorations in Economic History, 2010, 47 (4), 420–442. Mayda, Anna Maria, “Who Is Against Immigration? A Cross-Country Investigation of Individual Attitudes toward Immigrants,” The Review of Economics and Statistics, August 2006, 88 (3), 510–530. Mayoral, Laura and Debraj Ray, “Groups in Conflict: Size Matters, But Not In The Way You Think,” 2016. Mimeo. McCormick, Michael, Guoping Huang, Giovanni Zambotti, and Jessica Lavash, “Roman Road Network,” 2013. DARMC Scholarly Data Series 2013-5. Center for Geographic Analysis, Harvard University, Cambridge MA 02138. Michalopoulos, Stelios and Elias Papaioannou, “The Long-Run Effects of the Scramble for Africa,” American Economic Review, July 2016, 106 (7), 1802–48. Miguel, Edward, “Poverty and Witch Killing,” Review of Economic Studies, October 2005, 72 (4), 1153–1172. Miguel, Edward, Shanker Satyanath, and Ernest Sergenti, “Economic Shocks and Civil Conflict: An Instrumental Variables Approach,” Journal of Political Economy, 2004, 112 (4), 725–753. Mitra, Anirban and Debraj Ray, “Implications of an Economic Theory of Conflict: Hindu-Muslim Violence in India,” Journal of Political Economy, 2014, 122 (4), 719–765. Mollat, G., The Popes at Avignon: The “Babylonian Captivity” of the Medieval Church, New York: Harper Touch Books, 1963. Montalvo, Jose G. and Marta Reynal-Querol, “Ethnic Polarization, Potential Conflict, and Civil Wars,” American Economic Review, June 2005, 95 (3), 796–816. Montalvo, Jose G. and Marta Reynal-Querol, “Discrete Polarisation with an Application to the Determinants of Genocides,” Economic Journal, November 2008, 118 (533), 1835–1865. Moore, Robert, The Formation of a Persecuting Society: power and deviance in Western Europe, 950–1250, Oxford: Blackwell, 1987. Moriceau, Jean Marc, Chroniques pays annes: du Moyen, France Agricole Editions, 2010. Mueller, Reinhold C., The Venetian Money Market, banks, panics, and the public debt, 1200–1500, Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997. Munro, John H., “Before and after the Black Death: money, prices, and wages in fourteenth-century England,” MPRA Paper 15748, University Library of Munich, Germany December 2004. Nohl, Johannes, The Black Death: A Chronicle of the Plague, George Allen & Unwin LTD, 1924. translated by C.H. Clarke. Noonan, John T., The Scholastic Analysis of Usury, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.A: Harvard University Press, 1957. Nunn, Nathan, Nancy Qian, and Sandra Sequeira, “Migrants and the Making of America: The Short- and Long-Run Effects of Immigration during the Age of Mass Migration,” January 2017. Oster, Emily, “Witchcraft, Weather and Economic Growth in Renaissance Europe,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Winter 2004, 18 (1), 215–228. Pamuk, Sevket, “The Black Death and the origins of the ‘Great Divergence’ across Europe, 1300-1600,” European Review of Economic History, 2007, 11 (3), 289–317. Pascali, Luigi, “Banks and Development: Jewish Communities in the Italian Renaissance and Current Economic Performance,” Review of Economics and Statistics, 2016, 98 (1), 140–158. Ramirez, Olivier, Les Juifs et le credit en Savoie au XIVe sie`cle, Vol. 38, Centre Europeen d’Etudes Bourguignonnes, 2010. Ray, Debraj and Joan Esteban, “Conflict and Development,” 2016. Mimeo. Renouard, Yves, The Avignon Papacy, Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books, 1970. translated by Denis Bethell. Rogall, Thorsten, “Mobilizing the Masses for Genocide,” 2015. Mimeo. Rohner, Dominic, Mathias Thoenig, and Fabrizio Zilibotti, “Seeds of distrust: conflict in Uganda,” Journal of Economic Growth, September 2013, 18 (3), 217–252. Rohner, Dominic, Mathias Thoenig, and Fabrizio Zilibotti, “War Signals: A Theory of Trade, Trust, and Conflict,” Review of Economic Studies, 2013, 80 (3), 1114–1147. Roth, Cecil, “The Economic History of the Jews,” The Economic History Review, 1961, 14, 131–135. Rubin, Miri, “Desecration of the Host: The Birth of an Accusation,” Studies in Church History, 1992, 29, 169–185. Rubin, Miri, Gentile Tales: The Narrative Assault on Late Medieval Jews, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004. Russell, Josiah Cox, Medieval Regions and their Cities, Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles, 1972. Satyanath, Shanker, Nico Voigtla ̈nder, and Hans-Joachim Voth, “Bowling for fascism: Social capital and the rise of the Nazi Party in Weimar Germany, 1919-33,” 2017. Forthcoming in the Journal of Political Economy. Schwarzfuchs, Simon R., “Crusades,” in Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik, eds., Encyclopedia Judaica, Vol. 17 Macmillan Reference New York 2007, pp. 310–315. Seldin, Michael F, Russell Shigeta, Pablo Villoslada, Carlo Selmi, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Gabriel Silva, John W Belmont, Lars Klareskog, and Peter K Gregersen, “European Population Substructure: Clustering of Northern and Southern Populations,” PLOS Genetics, 09 2006, 2 (9), 1–13. Shatzmiller, Joseph, Jew, Medicine, and Medieval Society, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994. Shepherd, William R., Historical Atlas, New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1923. Shirk, Melanie V, “The Black Death in Aragon, 1348–1351,” Journal of Medieval History, 1981, 7 (4), 357–367. Sibon, Juliette, Les juifs de Marseille au XIVe sie`cle, Paris: CERF, 2011. Spufford, Peter, Money and its use in Medieval Europe, Cambridge: CUP, 1988. Stacey, Robert C., “From Ritual Crucifixion to Host Desecration: Jews and the Body of Christ,” Jewish History, 1998, 12 (1), 11–28. Stasavage, David, “Was Weber Right? The Role of Urban Autonomy in Europe’s Rise,” American Political Science Review, 5 2014, 108, 337–354. Staub, Ervin, The Roots of Evil: The Origins of Genocide and Other Group Violence, Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 1992. Talbert, Richard J. A, ed., Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World Princeton University Press Princeton 2000. Theilmann, John and Frances Cate, “A Plague of Plagues: The Problem of Plague Diagnosis in Medieval England,” The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2007, 37 (3), 371–393. Trachtenberg, Joshua, The Devil and the Jews, Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 1943. van Straten, Jits, “Early Modern Polish Jewry The Rhineland Hypothesis Revisited,” Historical Methods, 2007, 40 (1), 39–50. Voigtlander, Nico and Hans-Joachim Voth, “Persecution Perpetuated: The Medieval Origins of Anti-Semitic violence in Nazi Germany,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2012, 127 (3), 1–54. Voigtlander, Nico and Hans-Joachim Voth, “Married to Intolerance: Attitudes toward Intermarriage in Germany, 1900-2006,” American Economic Review, May 2013, 103 (3), 79–85. Voigtlander, Nico and Hans-Joachim Voth, “The Three Horsemen of Riches: Plague, War, and Urbanization in Early Modern Europe,” Review of Economic Studies, 2013, 80 (2), 774–811. Voigtlander, Nico and Hans-Joachim Voth, “Highway to Hitler,” ECON - Working Papers 156, Department of Economics - University of Zurich May 2014. Voigtlander, Nico and Hans-Joachim Voth, “Nazi indoctrination and anti-Semitic beliefs in Germany,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015, 112 (26), 7931–7936. Waldinger, Fabian, “Quality Matters: The Expulsion of Professors and the Consequences for PhD Student Outcomes in Nazi Germany,” Journal of Political Economy, 2010, 118 (4), 787–831. Waldinger, Fabian, “Peer Effects in Science: Evidence from the Dismissal of Scientists in Nazi Germany,” Review of Economic Studies, 2012, 79 (2), 838–861. Waldinger, Fabian, “Bombs, Brains, and Science: The Role of Human and Physical Capital for the Creation of Scientific Knowledge,” The Review of Economics and Statistics, December 2016, 98 (5), 811–831. Wasserman, Henry, “Regensburg,” in Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik, eds., Encyclopedia Judaica, Vol. 17 Macmillan Reference New York 2007, pp. 188–189. Yanagizawa-Drott, David, “Propaganda and Conflict: Evidence from the Rwandan Genocide,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2014, 129 (4), 1947–1994. Zanden, Jan Luiten Van, Eltjo Buringh, and Maarten Bosker, “The Rise and Decline of European Parliaments, 1188–1789,” Economic History Review, 08 2012, 65 (3), 835–861. Ziegler, Philip, The Black Death, London: Collins, 1969. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/77720 |
Available Versions of this Item
- Negative Shocks and Mass Persecutions: Evidence from the Black Death. (deposited 21 Mar 2017 17:36) [Currently Displayed]