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EVAN
ANDREWS
history.com
Take a look back at
six of the most infamous outbreaks of the disease once known as the “Great
Mortality.
1. The Plague of Justinian
Justinian I is often credited as the most
influential Byzantine emperor, but his reign also coincided with one of the
first well-documented outbreaks of plague.
The pandemic is believed to have originated
in Africa and then spread to Europe through infected rats on merchant ships.
It reached the Byzantine capital of
Constantinople in 541 A.D., and was soon claiming up to 10,000 lives per day — so
many that unburied bodies were eventually stacked inside buildings or left in
the open.
According to accounts by the ancient
historian Procopius, the victims demonstrated many of the classic symptoms of
bubonic plague, including sudden fever and swollen lymph nodes.
Justinian himself was stricken and managed to
recover, but over a third of Constantinople’s residents were not so lucky.
Even after it subsided in Byzantium, the
plague continued to reappear in Europe, Africa and Asia for several years,
causing widespread famine and devastation.
It is believed to have killed at least 25
million people, but the actual death toll may have been much higher.
2. The Black Death
Scene of the plague in Florence. |
This “Black Death” would eventually spend
half a decade tearing across the continent.
The populations of whole towns were wiped
out, and it was said that the living spent most of their time burying the dead
in mass graves.
“We see death coming
into our midst like black smoke,” the Welsh poet Jeuan Gethin wrote, “a
plague which cuts off the young, a rootless phantom which has no mercy or fair
countenance.”
Medieval physicians tried to combat the
disease using bloodletting, lancing and other crude techniques, but with little
understanding of its cause, most fell back on the belief that it was a divine
punishment for their sins.
Some Christians even blamed it on Jews and
launched bloody pogroms.
The Black Death finally subsided in the West
around 1353, but not before it killed as many as 50 million people — more than
half the population of Europe.
While the pandemic left much of the continent
in disarray, many historians also believe that the labor shortages it caused
were a boon to lower class workers, who saw increased economic and social
mobility.
3. The Italian Plague of 1629-31
Drawing of the Great Plague in Milan |
One of the most calamitous outbreaks began in
1629, when troops from the Thirty Years’ War carried the infection into the
Italian city of Mantua.
Over the next two years, the plague snaked
its way across the countryside, striking the major cities of Verona, Milan,
Venice, and Florence.
In Milan and Venice, city authorities
quarantined the sick in “pesthouses” and burned their clothes and possessions
to prevent the spread of infection.
The Venetians even banished some of their
plague victims to a pair of islands in a nearby lagoon.
These harsh measures may have helped contain
the scourge, but it still killed some 280,000 people, including over half the
residents of Verona.
The Republic of Venice, meanwhile, lost
nearly a third of its population of 140,000.
Some scholars have since argued that the
outbreak may have sapped the city-state’s strength and led to its decline as a
major player on the world stage.
4. The Great Plague of London
Drawing by William Blake of plague victims. |
The pestilence first arose in the suburb of
St. Giles-in-the-Fields, but it soon traveled into the cramped and filthy
neighborhoods of the city proper.
At its peak in September 1665, some 8,000
people were dying each week.
The wealthy — including King Charles II — fled
to the countryside, leaving the poor as the plague’s main victims.
“Never did so many
husbands and wives die together,” a reverend named Thomas Vincent wrote, “never
did so many parents carry their children with them to the grave.”
As the sickness spread, London’s authorities
tried to contain the infected by quarantining them in their homes, which were
marked with a red cross.
Somewhere between 75,000 and 100,000 people
eventually perished before the outbreak died down in 1666.
Later that same year, London was visited by a
second major tragedy when the Great Fire of 1666 torched much of its city
center.
5. The Great Plague of Marseille
Painting of Marseille during the plague. |
The disease arrived on a merchant ship called
the Grand Saint Antoine, which had picked up infected passengers during a
journey to the Middle East.
The vessel was quarantined, but its owner — who
also happened to be Marseille’s deputy mayor — convinced health officials to
let him unload its cargo.
Plague-carrying rat fleas soon spread across
the city, sparking an epidemic.
People died by the thousands, and the piles
of bodies on the streets grew so large that convicts were conscripted to
dispose of them.
In nearby Provence, “plague walls” were even
built to try to and contain the infection, but it still spilled over into
southern France before finally disappearing in 1722.
By then, it had killed roughly 100,000
people.
6. The Third Plague Pandemic
People in quarantine in Karachi during the outbreak. |
The most recent, the so-called “Third Pandemic,”
erupted in 1855 in the Chinese province of Yunnan.
The disease traversed the globe over the next
several decades, and by the beginning of the 20th century, infected rats
traveling on steamships had carried it to all six inhabited continents.
The worldwide outbreak would eventually claim
some 15 million lives before petering out in the 1950s.
Most of the devastation took place in China
and India, but there were also scattered cases from South Africa to San
Francisco.
Despite the heavy casualties, the Third
Pandemic led to several breakthroughs in doctors’ understanding of the bubonic
plague.
In 1894, a Hong Kong-based doctor named
Alexandre Yersin identified the bacillus Yersinia pestis as the cause of the
disease.
A few years later, another physician finally
confirmed that bites from rat fleas were the main way the infection spread to
humans.
BY EVAN ANDREWS
https://www.history.com/news/6-devastating-plagues
we.html
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https://www.history.com/news/6-devastating-plagues
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