Bubonic Plague
Bubonic Plague
Bubonic Plague, which was called generally “Black Death” or “Black Plague”, is one of the most serious epidemics in our human history. The origin of Bubonic Plague is from Southwestern Asia. It was spread to Europe in 1340s. This epidemic caused about 75 million people dead, and there are 25 million from Europe. According to statistic, one third of European who lived in the Middle Age died because this epidemic. This has been seen as creating a series of religious, social and economic upheavals which had profound effects on the course of European history. It took 150 years for Europes population to recover. The plague returned at various times, resulting in a larger number of deaths, until it left Europe in the 19th century. Through reviewing the history of Bubonic Plague, its effects and the method of prevention and cure, we can define how important of global health corporation.
The history of Bubonic Plague is very long. The earliest account describing a possible plague epidemic is found in I Samuel 5:6 of the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh). In this account, the Philistines of Ashdod were stricken with a plague for the crime of stealing the Ark of the Covenant from the Children of Israel. These events have been dated to approximately the second half of the eleventh century B.C. The word “tumors” is used in most English translations to describe the sores that came upon the Philistines. The Hebrew, however, can be interpreted as “swelling in the secret parts”. The account indicates that the Philistine city and its political territory were stricken with a “ravaging of mice” and a plague, bringing death to a large segment of the population.
In the second year of the Peloponnesian War (430 B.C.), Thucydides described an epidemic disease which was said to have begun in Ethiropia, passed through Egypt and Libya, then come to the Greek world. In the Plague of Athens, the city lost possibly one third of its population, including Pericles. Modern historians disagree on whether the plague was a critical factor in the loss of the war. Although this epidemic has long been considered an outbreak of plague, many modern scholars believe that typhus, smallpox, or measles may better fit the surviving descriptions. A recent study of DNA found in the dental pulp of plague victims suggests that typhoid was actually responsible.
In the first century A.D., Rufus of Ephesus, a Greek anatomist, refers to an outbreak of plague in Libya, Egypt, and Syria. He records that Alexandrian doctors named Dioscorides and Posidonius described symptoms including acute fever, pain, agitation, and delirium. Buboes—large, hard, and non-suppurating—developed behind the knees, around the elbows, and “in the usual places.” The death toll of those infected was very high. Rufus also wrote that similar buboes were reported by a Dionysius Curtus, who may have