A Decomposition Approach to Cause-Specific Mortality in the Port City of Antwerp in the Early 20th Century
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51964/hlcs23571Keywords:
Mortality, Historical causes of death, Decomposition method, Port cities, SHiP network, Aggregated data, 20th Century, BelgiumAbstract
Building on Janssens' work, which highlights the distinct epidemiological profiles of port cities, this study explores cause-specific mortality in early 20th-century Antwerp, Belgium's largest city and a major international port. Using Arriaga's decomposition method, we compare life expectancy and mortality by cause of death in Antwerp with those in Brussels, Ghent, and Liège, the country's next three largest cities. Despite its status as a bustling port city, Antwerp showed a relative health advantage. However, this advantage masked gender- and age-specific risks. Young adult men experienced elevated mortality from accidents, largely due to hazardous port labor, while women faced excess mortality from childbirth, likely linked to socioeconomic vulnerabilities among working-class and immigrant women. Notably, child mortality from infectious diseases was higher in Antwerp than in the other three cities, reflecting particular public health challenges. These findings highlight the importance of individual-level data to better understand localized mortality and cause-of-death patterns. They also underscore the need for further comparative research within the frameworks of the SHiP and Great Leap networks.
Downloads
References
Alter, G. C., & Carmichael, A. G. (1999). Classifying the dead: Toward a history of the registration of causes of death. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 54(2), 114–32. https://doi.org/10.1093/jhmas/54.2.114
Auger, N., Feuillet, P., Martel, S., Lo, E., Barry, A. D., & Harper, S. (2014). Mortality inequality in populations with equal life expectancy: Arriaga's decomposition method in SAS, Stata, and Excel. Annals of epidemiology, 24(8), 575–580.e1. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annepidem.2014.05.006
Arriaga, E. E. (1984). Measuring and explaining the change in life expectancies. Demography, 21(1), 83–96. https://doi.org/10.2307/2061029
Bertels, I., De Munck, B., & Van Goethem, H. (Eds.). (2010). Antwerpen: Biografie van een stad [Antwerp: Biography of a City]. Meulenhoff/Manteau.
Deferme, J. (2007). Uit de ketens van de vrijheid: Het debat over de sociale politiek in België [Out of the chains of freedom: The debate on social policy in Belgium]. Universitaire Pers Leuven.
Devos, I. (2006). Mortaliteit en morbiditeit in Vlaanderen, 18de–20ste eeuw [Mortality and morbidity in Flanders, 18th–20th centuries]. Academia Press.
Devos, I., Heynssens, S., & Janssens, A. (2023). Doodsoorzaken in Amsterdam en Antwerpen: Hoe burgerwetenschap de stadsgeschiedenis voortstuwt [Causes of death in Amsterdam and Antwerp: How citizen science propels urban history]. Stadsgeschiedenis, 18(2), 118–132. https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.9266105.6
Devos, I., & Janssens, A. (Eds.). (2017). Introduction to re-considering the burden of disease in the Low Countries in past centuries. TSEG - The Low Countries Journal of Social and Economic History, 14(4), 5–24. https://doi.org/10.18352/tseg.1001
Devos, I., & Van Rossem, T. (2015). Urban health penalties. Estimates of life expectancies in Belgian cities. Journal of Belgian History, 45(4), 75–109. http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-7002539
Ghent University Quetelet Center. (n.d.). LOKSTAT [dataset]. http://www.lokstat.ugent.be/en/lokstat_start.php
Greefs, H., & Winter, A. (2020). Cities in motion. Mobility, migration selectivity and demographic change in Belgian cities, 1846–1910. In B. Blondé, S. Geens, H. Greefs, W. Ryckbosch, T. Soens, & P. Stabel (Eds.), Inequality and the city in the Low Countries (1200–2020) (pp. 79–100). Brepols.
Greefs, H. & Winter, A. (2016). Alone and far from home. Gender and migration trajectories of single foreign newcomers to Antwerp, 1850–1880. Journal of Urban History, 42(1), 61–80. https://doi.org/10.1177/0096144215611092
Hacha, T. (forthcoming). From death to data: The history of cause-of-death registration in Belgium (1820–1960).
Hein, C., & Schubert, D. (2021). Resilience, disaster, and rebuilding in modern port cities. Journal of Urban History, 47(2), 235–249. https://doi.org/10.1177/0096144220925097
Janssens, A. (2014). Labouring Lives. Women, work and the demographic transition in the Netherlands, 1880–1960. Peter Lang.
Janssens, A. (2021). Constructing SHiP and an international historical coding system for causes of death. Historical Life Course Studies, 10, 64–70. https://doi.org/10.51964/hlcs9569
Janssens, A., & Devos, I. (2022). The limits and possibilities of cause of death categorisation for understanding late nineteenth-century mortality. Social History of Medicine, 35(4),1053–1063. https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkac040
Janssens, A., & Pelzer, B. (2012). Did factory girls make bad mothers? Women's work experience, motherhood and children's mortality risks in the past. Biodemography and Social Biology, 58(2), 133–148. https://doi.org/10.1080/19485565.2012.720451
Janssens, A., & Walhout, E. (2018). Gateways of disease? The case of the Netherlands, 1875–1899. In P. Puschmann, & T. Riswick (Eds.), Building bridges. Scholars, history and historical demography (pp.32–61). Valkhof Pers.
Lis, C. (1986). Social change and the labouring poor: Antwerp, 1770–1860. Yale University Press.
Puschmann, P. (2015). Social inclusion and exclusion of urban in-migrants in Northwestern European port cities. Antwerp, Rotterdam & Stockholm ca. 1850–1930 [Unpublished doctoral dissertation, KU Leuven].
Reid, A., Garrett, E., Dibben, C., & Williamson, L. (2015). ‘A confession of ignorance': Deaths from old age and deciphering cause-of-death statistics in Scotland, 1855–1949. The History of the Family, 20(3), 320–344. https://doi.org/10.1080/1081602X.2014.1001768
State Archives Belgium. (n.d). Mouvement de la Population, 1841–1976. https://agatha.arch.be/data/ead/BE-A0510_004393_005475
Van Craenenbroeck, W. (1998). Antwerpen op zoek naar drinkwater: Het ontstaan en de ontwikkeling van de openbare drinkwatervoorziening in Antwerpen 1860-1930 [Antwerp in search of drinking water: The origin and development of the public drinking water supply in Antwerp, 1860–1930]. Lannoo.
Van Elsen, J. (2003). "Het slagveld van den arbeid". Arbeidsrisico in de haven van Antwerpen rond 1900 ["The battlefield of labour”: Occupational risk in the port of Antwerp around 1900] [Master's thesis, KU Leuven]. https://scriptiebank.be/scriptie/2003/het-slagveld-van-den-arbeid
Van Rossem, T. (2018). Bruxelles ma belle, Bruxelles mortelle: An investigation into excess mortality in Brussels at the turn of the twentieth century [Doctoral Dissertation, Ghent University]. http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8573969
Vanfraechem, S. (2005). Een sfeer om haring te braden: Arbeidsverhoudingen in de haven van Antwerpen 1880–1972 [An atmosphere fit for frying herring: Labour relations in the port of Antwerp 1880–1972]. Academia Press.
Vögele, J., & Umehara, H. (2015). Gateways of disease: Public health in European and Asian port cities at the birth of the modern world in the late 19th and early 20th century. Cuvillier Verlag.
Velle, K. (1985). Statistiek en sociale politiek: De medische statistiek en het gezondheidsbeleid in België in de 19de eeuw [Statistics and social policy: Medical statistics and health policy in Belgium in the 19th century]. Journal of Belgian History, 16(1–2), 213–242. https://www.journalbelgianhistory.be/nl/system/files/article_pdf/BTNG-RBHC%2C%2016%2C%201985%2C%201-2%2C%20pp%20213-242.pdf
Winter, A. (2009). Migrants and urban change: Newcomers to Antwerp 1760–1860. Pickering and Chatto.

Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Isabelle Devos

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.