Population and nutrition : an essay on European demographic history
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Population and nutrition : an essay on European demographic history
(Cambridge studies in population, economy and society in past time, 14)
Cambridge University Press, 1990, c1991
- : hard
- : pbk
- Other Title
-
Popolazione e alimentazione : saggio sulla storia demografica Europea
Available at 44 libraries
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  Toyama
  Ishikawa
  Fukui
  Yamanashi
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  Kyoto
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  Tottori
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Note
Translation of: Popolazione e alimentazione
Bibliography: p. 122-143
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
From the time of Malthus, the insufficient supply of food resources has been considered the main constraint of population growth and the main factor in the high mortality prevailing in pre-industrial times. In this essay, the mechanisms of biological, social and cultural nature linking subsistence, mortality and population and determining its short and long term cycles are discussed. The author's analysis examines the existing evidence from the century of the Great Plague to the industrial revolution, interpreting the scanty quantitative information concerning caloric budgets and food supply, prices and wages, changes in body height and epidemiological history, demographic behaviours of the rich and of the poor. The emerging picture sheds doubts on the existence of a long term interrelation between subsistence of nutritional levels and mortality, showing that the level of the latter was determined more by the epidemiological cycles than by the nutritional level of the population.
Table of Contents
- 1. Demographic growth in Europe
- 2. Energy, nutrition and survival
- 3. Famine and want
- 4. The starving and the well-fed
- 5. Food and standard of living: hypotheses and controversies
- 6. Antagonism and adaption.
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