Historical death registration was conducted primarily to assess the presence of plague. The Liber Mortuorum of Milan was one of Europe’s first registers with many socio-demographical details. In this work, we consider 1480 to make spatial and temporal analyses of the event of death to find possible explanations about the events’ distribution and the events’ trend over time. The spatial analyses involved Moran’s I, the LISA, and the heatmaps; the temporal analysis applied the Durbin-Watson test. All the analyses were conducted separately on all subjects (1813), children (765), and adults (1046). Contrade (districts) were considered for spatial analysis. Moran’s I and the Durbin Watson test were significant on all subjects and children’s analyses, and the LISA showed the same results for those groups. Children may significantly impact the distribution of death and the trend over time. At least half of the children were 0 years old, and survival in the very first childhood period was closely linked to the family, so that it could be a proxy of the conditions of an area.
Spatial and Temporal Analyses of the Event of Death for 1480 in Milan Using the Data Contained in the Sforza’s Registers of the Dead / E. Luconi, P. Boracchi, R. Nodari, F. Comandatore, G. Marano, F. Vaglienti, M. Galli, E. Biganzoli. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH. - ISSN 1660-4601. - 20:4(2023), pp. 2783.1-2783.12. [10.3390/ijerph20042783]
Spatial and Temporal Analyses of the Event of Death for 1480 in Milan Using the Data Contained in the Sforza’s Registers of the Dead
E. Luconi
Primo
;P. BoracchiSecondo
;R. Nodari;F. Comandatore;G. Marano;F. Vaglienti;M. GalliPenultimo
;E. BiganzoliUltimo
2023
Abstract
Historical death registration was conducted primarily to assess the presence of plague. The Liber Mortuorum of Milan was one of Europe’s first registers with many socio-demographical details. In this work, we consider 1480 to make spatial and temporal analyses of the event of death to find possible explanations about the events’ distribution and the events’ trend over time. The spatial analyses involved Moran’s I, the LISA, and the heatmaps; the temporal analysis applied the Durbin-Watson test. All the analyses were conducted separately on all subjects (1813), children (765), and adults (1046). Contrade (districts) were considered for spatial analysis. Moran’s I and the Durbin Watson test were significant on all subjects and children’s analyses, and the LISA showed the same results for those groups. Children may significantly impact the distribution of death and the trend over time. At least half of the children were 0 years old, and survival in the very first childhood period was closely linked to the family, so that it could be a proxy of the conditions of an area.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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