Beyond The Swedish Postcard
In the summer of 1349, a ghost ship drifted into the harbor of Bergen, Norway. Every man on board was dead. The cargo was not wool, grain, or timber... it was Yersinia pestis. The plague. The Great Death aka The Black Death. Within a year, it had crossed the mountains into Sweden. By the time it was finished, it had killed a third of the population, perhaps half. Entire villages vanished. The forests swallowed farms that had stood for centuries. The tax records of the Swedish crown filled with a single, devastating word: öde. Deserted. Empty. Silent. In this episode of Beyond the Swedish Postcard, we explore the Black Death in Sweden. What did it feel like to live through it? Why did Norway's written language collapse while Sweden's peasantry emerged stronger? Where are the mass graves in Visby that should hold thousands of bodies but have never been found? And why are scientists now questioning the centuries-old story about rats and fleas? We'll walk through the abandoned farms still hidden in the Swedish forest. We'll read the desperate letters of bishops who couldn't save their flocks. We'll trace how the plague reshaped the economy, the language, and the very soul of medieval Sweden, paving the way for a remarkably free peasantry and a crisis of faith that would eventually give rise to one of the most extraordinary women in European history: Saint Birgitta. Not that long ago, we went through our own pandemic. The questions the Black Death forced people to ask: why did this happen? who is to blame? will things ever be normal again? They are questions we recognize. The answers they found changed Sweden forever. This episode contains detailed descriptions of pandemic illness and death. Listener discretion is advised. Please follow on Spotify, it really helps.
22 episodes
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