Abstract:
In this paper we aim to present that one of the consequences of globalization,
regardless of the era in which it took place, be it Antiquity, the Middle Ages or the
Modern Age, besides the commercial exchanges and interpersonal relations, there
was the appearance of epidemics, of the global diseases. Of these, among which we
may mention cholera, typhus, syphilis, leprosy, and plague, the latter one had the
most notable effects not only on the lives of men, but also on their way of thinking,
and was called, when it arrived in medieval Europe, as Black Death. In this sense,
we will try to follow some of the most significant changes, which take place both
behaviorally and culturally, but also their political and historical consequences
during the installation of the Black Death in Western Europe in the fourteenth and
seventeenth centuries.