Historical demography and the crisis of the seventeenth century

The seventeenth century, broadly conceived, marks an important turning point in the history of European population movements. Long cycles characterized, first, by population expansion and subsequently by mortality contractions due to famine or disease held long-term population growth largely in chec...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of interdisciplinary history 2009-10, Vol.XL (2), p.195-214
1. Verfasser: McCants, Anne E.C.
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description The seventeenth century, broadly conceived, marks an important turning point in the history of European population movements. Long cycles characterized, first, by population expansion and subsequently by mortality contractions due to famine or disease held long-term population growth largely in check. The subsistence and mortality crises of the middle decades of the seventeenth century and the fundamental shift in the capacity of the European population to grow after 1750 together suggest that the case for a 'general crisis of the seventeenth century' has strong demographic support. Reprinted by permission of the MIT Press
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ispartof The Journal of interdisciplinary history, 2009-10, Vol.XL (2), p.195-214
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source Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects 17th century
Demographic research
Diseases
Europe
Historiography
Mortality
Population growth
Population movements
Social history
title Historical demography and the crisis of the seventeenth century
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