-
contemporary with the
plague described the
disease in
Latin as
pestis or
pestilentia, 'pestilence'; epidemia, 'epidemic'; mortalitas, 'mortality'. In English...
- was enacted.
Pliny says that when a
swarm of
flies is
causing disease (
pestilentia), the
Eleans invoke Myacoris, and once the god has
approved and accepted...
-
based on the real
Spanish flu, but has
killed 99.9% of mankind.
Fluvus pestilentia Grimm ("Quill") An
enterobacteria affecting only Wesen, characterized...
-
University of Bologna.
Consilio di
Tommaso del
Garbo Fiorentino contro la
Pestilentia, in: M. Ficino,
Contra alla peste, Firenze, 1576
Treccani Encyclopedia...
-
scrittori romani giudicavano la
Sardegna una
terra malsana, dove
dominava la
pestilentia (la malaria),
abitata da
popoli di
origine africana ribelli e resistenti...
- Katinis,
Medicina e
filosofia in
Marsilio Ficino: Il
Consiglio contra la
Pestilentia, (Rome, 2007), pp 29ff. Alderotti, I Consiglia, G.M. Nardi, ed. (Turin)...
- (di inferi). They were
established in
response to an
epidemic (magna …
pestilentia)
afflicting pregnant women,
caused by the
distribution of the
flesh of...
- left a
horse and a mule for you at Brundisium' nunc
quidem iam
abiit pestilentia (Cicero) 'the
epidemic has now gone away' hīs dē rēbus scrīpsī ad senātum...
- own re****tion in the
following years with the 1577
publication of De
Pestilentia, his
treatise about the plague,
which had been
delivered as a series...
- in the 1926
translation of B. F.
Foster (Felix
annus bellicis rebus,
pestilentia gravis prodigiisque sollicitus; nam et
terram multifariam pluvisse et...