‘Ermus’s important new study shows how a regional disaster that caused catastrophic loss of life only within Provence and Languedoc created novel opportunities for nation-state authorities to centralize power and implement policies that led to trade advantages over their economic rivals. Plague in Provence provided rulers a powerful tool: fear’
Ann G. Carmichael - Indiana University, Bloomington
‘This authoritative account of the impact of the great plague of Provence in the 1720s across Europe, and even across the Atlantic, makes a highly original and immensely rewarding exercise in comparative history on a grand scale.’
Paul Slack - Oxford University
‘Based on a wealth of archival sources, Ermus’ study provides valuable insight into the global significance of the plague of Marseille and Provence and highlights the long history of the relationship between statecraft and public health management. The Great Plague Scare of 1720 is a timely contribution that deeply resonates in our own age of pandemics and climate change.’
Junko Takeda - Syracuse University
‘Ermus’s book provides an innovative, ambitious and timely account of the global repercussions of the 1720 plague, unveiling the political, economic and diplomatic issues associated with the health crisis in Provence. The COVID-19 pandemic has indeed highlighted the need for such studies to understand the global repercussions of disasters from a historical perspective.’
Marina Inì
Source: International Journal of Maritime History
‘enjoyable, intriguing, and timely.’
Michael P. Hensley
Source: Economic History Association
‘… in this well-researched book Ermus has breathed new life into a familiar topic and has shown that much can still be said about the plague of Provence.’
Neil Murphy
Source: The Journal of Modern History