- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
The Black Death
Doctors who treat Black Death's Patients |
In October of 1347, 12 ships dropped anchor at a Sicilian port. Those who eagerly approached were met with a grisly sight. Almost all aboard were either dead or barely alive, their skin erupting with blackened boils that dripped blood and pus. In horror, the Sicilian authorities demanded the ships set sail, but though they left, the damage had already been done. The Black Death is now in Europe and millions would die in what is considered one of the greatest disasters in history.
'Let's explore how the Bubonic plague wiped out at least a third of Europe's population, if not more in this article of here Grab.'
Europe was hit hard by the plague but it was not hit first. It was also not unaware of a disaster that was already bringing widespread death and destruction elsewhere. Before the infested ships arrived in Sicily rumors of a frightful sickness devastating the populations of first China and then India, Egypt, Persia, and Syria had spread near and far. While no one knew what caused it or why it seemed to follow trade routes spanning the near and far East. Further, when it appeared, it was unstoppable by all accounts. Those struck by the Black Death would begin to swell at the lymph nodes located in their groin area or underarm regions. The growth would soon develop into large blackish-blue egg-sized lumps, or for the even less fortunate, expands to the size of apples. These wounds then fester and oozed various bodily fluids. Beyond this, those with the disease could develop any combination of a series of additional symptoms. These included fever, pain, chills, sweating, upset stomach, and diarrhea. Almost always this was followed by death. According to those who observed it's effects first-hand, all it appeared to take was brief physical contact with the clothing of someone who was sick to pass the disease onto another. Though, some doctors claim that it was the spirit leaving the body of the deceased that infected others as it passed by. Obviously, at this point in history, the real methods of disease transmission were not yet well understood, Without understanding it most were unable to defend against it.
Patients suffering from The Black Death |
Few areas other than some islands cut off from the rest of Europe by the sea made it through the pandemic plague-free. The rest of the population was not so lucky. The bacterium infiltrated virtually every European city's defenses and many who appeared perfectly healthy could be dead a few days later. It was uncommon though possible for someone to survive a week or two before he or she dies. Compounding problems further those with the disease would typically be asymptomatic for the first few days and so no one would be aware that they had caught it. This meant that successfully isolating them from the rest of the society at this point was all but impossible. Those who tried the next best thing to protect themselves by fleeing for the country were not safe either. The plague decimated livestock as well as the countless pigs, cows, chickens, goats, and sheep who also died a brutal death. This was such a problem that led to a shortage of wool throughout the continent. While many European areas had a death figure of around 30%, 90% of the Italian city of Florence perished. Sometimes, the bodies of the deceased remained where they had died as there were not enough people still living to bury them.
Thousands of french villages in addition to areas in other locations were left without a single remaining soul. The Black Death had mercilessly transformed them into ghost towns. In some regions, nature took over, and areas that people once called homes were reclaimed by the surrounding forest. It took aerial photography following the end of world war 1 to rediscover these locations as places where men, women, and children lived once. Most estimate Europe's death total between 50 and 70 million or around thirty-some percent, though the CDC claims it killed as much as 60% of the total population, which is considerably more. World estimates typically range from 155 million to 200 million. The world at that time was a mere 500 million people, so nearly half of all it's inhabitants, or again according to some sources, even more, were killed.
So how was it, the black death was able to spread so quickly and wipe out so many?
For one point, as previously mentioned there was very little in the way of scientific knowledge in the 1300s. Not only did people understand the plague's cause or modes of transmission, but there were also countless failures in how those in the medical field attempted to treat it. It is true that Yersinia pestis, the bacterium behind the black Death, or bubuonic plague, is highly contagious. It can also be spread in many ways, though obviously contaminated spirits aren't one of them. Many believe that in it's later stages it had the ability to morph into an airborne strain that could be passed on to a new host via a simple sneeze or cough. However, all strains, airborne or those in the more initial stages that are not, are believed to have been transferred through flea or lice bites and many animals in addition to countryside livestock serve as hosts for the bacterium and blood-sucking pests, examples are things like:-
- Squirrels
- Rabbits
- Chipmunks
- Mice
Graphical view of Animals and Humans Suffering from Black Death |
However, many in the scientific field have argued that by far the worst contribution to the spread of the Black Death was the urban rat and its flea. Part of the reason for this belief is that rats have been observed symptoms quite similar to those in humans, and in the case of the modern-day plague many people with the sickness had accompanying bites from fleas. Recent outbreaks often follow what's known as 'rat falls' as well, or when the rodents die off in record amounts for whatever reason. Thus the most prevalent theory is that the Black Death all begin when rats with the plague died and their fleas then looked for more blood in another readily available source, which would at that time be humans. Upon being bitten by the contaminated fleas, that person would be exposed to the deadly bacteria. Seemingly in support of this theory, ships during the mid-1300s were commonly infested with the furry rodents who thrived in their dark, moist environment, and following the death ships' arrival in Sicily the plague continued to spread further following a trade route pattern, as it had previously in Asia, to other port locations throughout Europe and as far down as North Africa.
The cycle of the Spreading of Plague |
More recently there have been some proposed tweaks to this rat-based theory. As I just mentioned, the Black Death, after all, is not the only outbreak of the plague in the world's history. There have been outbreaks even before as well as after, and those that took place more recently followed a different pattern entirely. Europe's black Death spread much faster, and as far as historical records are connected there was mention of mass rat die-off in the days or months preceding it. Now, some scientists suggest that it was human fleas and lice that were the true culprits behind Europe's version of the disease. In this case, fleas would bite infected people and then move on to other, one by one, who happened to be in their nearby vicinity. They described the underlying mathematical model that a rat-flea spread follows is quite different from a human flea and lice one, and when the information was plugged into simulations the human-flea model more closely matched data from seven out of nine plagues hit European cities. Those with this newest evidence admit that the cause of the plague is surrounded by ongoing controversy.
However, whether the fleas were of the humans or rat variety, it is blood-sucking pests of one kind or another that passed it on successfully and so very quickly. It also turned out that the Black death may not have been causing mass devastation all by itself. When victim's bodies were exhumed for mass graves in England "Anthrax spores" were also discovered along with them. If anthrax was occurring at that same time as the plague this world definitely had made things much worse. Anthrax can not only be passed by coming in contact with sweat, saliva, or tears but also by mere skin contact. In other words, at the same time of the Black Death pandemic, people could have come down with a life-threatening disease of one kind or another in pretty much every conceivable way. It is possible anthrax and other disease made people extra susceptible to the plague due to already compromised immunity. Also, it's possible that the body counts those claimed by the Black Death included victims that actually died from anthrax or other diseases. Beyond its, a quick transfer from host to host and the contributions of additional disease, the way Black Death was treated failed to help and may have actually helped kill victims or spread it further unintentionally. For example:-
Bloodletting During the Black Death |
- At least initially medical practitioners would do such things as perform bloodletting on patients with plague. This is where they cut into veins or arteries in the neck or arm of those who were sick so that their blood flew freely. This procedure was nothing new and, in fact, dated back as far as to the time of ancient Egypt and Greece. Historical figures believe that to be healthy the body needs the right balance of blood, phlegm, and bile. Bloodletting was believed to correct a possible imbalance of too much blood which is what caused the person to get sick. Unfortunately, the procedure appeared to be as ineffective for the victims of the plague as it was for 'Charles II' or 'George Washington' centuries later. While Washington awoke with a sore throat and the king Charles suffered a seizure, following bloodletting treatments both died shortly thereafter.
Boil-Lancing during the Black Death |
- Boil-lancing was another technique used as a form of treatment which was just how it sounds. Someone would essentially lance, or stick a pointy object into the boils to drain them of their gooey contents. If this wasn't done, they would only continue to grow larger and, in time poison their host due to the mass build-up of poison due to dead blood and pus. Then again pooping them could also cause death, beyond the patient likely dying, the boils contained highly contagious matter and possibly spread the disease yet further.
Other methods such as the burning of various herbs or immersing the sick in vinegar or rosewater were also, unsurprisingly, ineffective. In the time after failure after failure and in an attempt at self-preservation, many doctors simply stopped accepting patients. Even Priests began refusing to perform last rites out of danger for their own safety.
Where men failed nature did a little help either. Not only did people have little idea of how to handle the plague, but they were genetically prone to succumbing to it. Studies of the remains of the European population at the time determines that only 0.2% had a gene that offered them any form of immunity. The other 99.8% had none, so since so many of those were susceptible to the plague died from it, they did not pass their genes on further to the following generations. Many of those who did have the gene lived on to procreate. This is why Caucasian Americans now have a 15% chance of having some resistance to the disease. This is pretty good news considering the modern form of plague is still around today.
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Comments
Corona seems like a small peanut infront of Black Death and it has caused so much and of panic and chaos in the world. Can't even imagine that time bruh.
ReplyDeleteWell it's the medical knowledge man. We didn't had much then but know we do have plenty but still we are fighting..
Deletecorona do seems like an egg-sized black boil in front of the Black Death :p
ReplyDeleteLet's hope it won't fetch into some monster.
DeleteLet's just hope xorona dosent turns out to be even half as bad as black death
ReplyDeleteYeah, we can only hope..
Delete