It
started in the east where it had already claimed "countless lives,"
according to contemporary chronicles. It could be contracted through direct contact with the afflicted. It could kill so quickly that a man could go to bed healthy and die in his sleep. It killed doctors in front
of their patients, parents before their children, lovers in each other's
arms -- and there was no known cure:
The Black Death
No
one knows for sure where this fourteenth-century pandemic originated,
but it traveled along the silk road, reaching the Crimea in 1343. In
October 1347, it went ashore in Sicily transported on Genoese ships, but
also in Alexandria. From Sicily, it spread to Genoa and Venice, then to
Pisa, Florence and Rome. Meanwhile, the first shipload of infected
sailors had gone ashore at Marseilles in January 1348. It spread then
along the rivers and roads across the Languedoc to Bordeaux and from
there to Paris. It reached England and Portugal by June 1348 and spread
across Germany and Scotland in the following year. In 1349 it had
reached the outer edge of Europe - Norway. Then spread eastwards again
sweeping across Russia in 1351. Meanwhile, between 1347 and 1349 it had
devastated Egypt, Palestine, Syria and the al-Jazeera.
In
its wake, the Black Death left an estimated 200 million people dead
worldwide. In Europe, between 45 and 50 percent of the population had
been wiped out. Death rates varied considerably from country to country,
however. Scientists now believe that Mediterranean cities suffered most
severely with death rates of perhaps 80% in some cities, while northern
Europe was comparatively spared. England and Germany probably lost no
more than 20% of their inhabitants.
Since
the end of the 19th century, the Black Death has been presumed to be bubonic plague. Based on epidemics of this disease in the Crimea and
India, it was hypothesized that the disease was carried by fleas on rats, who moved to humans when the rat host died. This hypothesis pre-supposes, of course, that medieval humans were unhygienic, and even noblemen and the most wealthy merchants -- in the Arab world as well as the West -- were constantly covered in fleas. The explanation, however,
fit in with the then-prevalent view of the Middle Ages as a period of ignorance, superstition, and filth.
Aside
from the fact that the latter is not true, in the last fifty years, a
number of different scientists have questioned the 19th-century
explanation of the Black Death. The DNA tests have been inconclusive,
despite sensationalist reporting. The skeptics also point to a number of characteristics of the 14th-century pandemic incompatible with bubonic plague. For example, the speed at which it spread (from Sicily to England in nine months) given the means of transportation at the time, is incompatible with what has been observed in modern bubonic plague epidemics. Furthermore, the alleged carriers of the disease, the fleas, could not have survived in the climate of northern Europe. Then there's that pesky detail about the dead rats. Since the rats had to die first, surely at least one of all the hundreds of accounts written by eyewitnesses would have made at least some mention of dead rats being everywhere? Of the rat corpses piling up alongside the human ones?
Alternative
theories for the cause of the Black Death include anthrax -- a
virulent, infectious disease that frightens us even today in this age of
exemplary hygiene.
But
it doesn't really matter what caused the Black Death in the
mid-fourteenth century because something like the Black Death could
never happen nowadays. After all, we live in an enlightened and scientific age. We are intelligent and we understand hygiene. We have flush toilets, disinfectants, rubber gloves, and hand sanitizer -- not
to mention antibiotics and anti-viral drugs.
We
could never be surprised by a disease that spreads from Asia and
infects people so rapidly that our first-class, (compared to the MIddle
Ages infinitely more superior) healthcare systems are overwhelmed. It's
impossible for modern people, who are oh so much cleaner than
those benighted slobs of the Middle Ages, to get sick just by going to
some public event or traveling on a luxury -- wonderfully clean and certainly not flea-infested -- cruise ship. No, we are so, so superior to our medieval ancestors that we could never, ever be struck by a
pandemic at all!
No?
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