Plagues, climate change, and the end of an empire: A response to Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome (3): Disease, agency, and collapse.Published in:History Compass, 2018, v. 16, n. 12, p. N.PAG, doi. 10.1111/hic3.12507By:Haldon, John;Elton, Hugh;Huebner, Sabine R.;Izdebski, Adam;Mordechai, Lee;Newfield, Timothy P.Publication type:Article
Viewpoint New Approaches to the 'Plague of Justinian'*.Published in:Past & Present, 2022, v. 254, n. 1, p. 315, doi. 10.1093/pastj/gtab024By:Sarris, PeterPublication type:Article
The 'Justinianic Plague': the economic consequences of the pandemic in the eastern Roman empire and its cultural and religious effects.Published in:Early Medieval Europe, 2016, v. 24, n. 3, p. 267, doi. 10.1111/emed.12152By:Meier, MischaPublication type:Article
Emphyteusis in a Time of Death: What Can Laws on Church Property Really Tell Us about the Sixth-Century Plague?Published in:Studies in Late Antiquity, 2023, v. 7, n. 4, p. 561, doi. 10.1525/sla.2023.7.4.561By:Rockwell, DavidPublication type:Article
One Plague for Another? Interdisciplinary Shortcomings in Plague Studies and the Place of the Black Death in Histories of the Justinianic Plague.Published in:2022By:Newfield, Timothy P.Publication type:Essay