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	<title>History Blog &#187; Medieval History</title>
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	<description>Insight into History - A Weekly Instrospective Into The Past</description>
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		<title>The Inca Empire - Part III Religion</title>
		<link>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-inca-empire-part-iii-religion/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-inca-empire-part-iii-religion/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 13:52:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Charlotte</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[While every aspect of the taxpayers’ life was inspected by the elite classes, they were often allowed relative freedom in religious worship, as long as they complied with the demands put on them by the religious leaders, such as paying tribute. More often than not, the Incas themselves accepted the Provinces’ gods, or superimposed their gods onto the local pantheon. In this way, the integration of new peoples was smoother and more widely accepted. Religion was therefore, not primarily concerned with the spiritual life of individuals, rather, it was organized to gain more practical result which reflected the reality of Inca power. An example of this is the idea of the Emperor ruling with divine right as he was considered to be a descendant of the Sun god. His connection to the gods gave him more power over the people as he controlled not only their secular lives but also their religious lives.

On an individual level, it was important to maintain a positive relationship with the gods to ensure the nature of all forces acting on the environment remained profitable. This was especially important considering the high necessity of successful food crops which everyone depended on for survival. The Sun god, which traditionally headed the deities, was studied by astronomer who constructed a twelve month calendar which was linked around the agricultural practice. The Scared Valley contained two streams which were believed to be the center of the ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/tiwanaku.png" align="left" alt="The Inca Empire: Religion - Statue in Tiwanaku" title="The Inca Empire: Religion - Statue in Tiwanaku" border="0">While every aspect of the taxpayers’ life was inspected by the elite classes, they were often allowed relative freedom in religious worship, as long as they complied with the demands put on them by the religious leaders, such as paying tribute. More often than not, the Incas themselves accepted the Provinces’ gods, or superimposed their gods onto the local pantheon. In this way, the integration of new peoples was smoother and more widely accepted. Religion was therefore, not primarily concerned with the spiritual life of individuals, rather, it was organized to gain more practical result which reflected the reality of Inca power. An example of this is the idea of the Emperor ruling with divine right as he was considered to be a descendant of the Sun god. His connection to the gods gave him more power over the people as he controlled not only their secular lives but also their religious lives.</p>
<p>On an individual level, it was important to maintain a positive relationship with the gods to ensure the nature of all forces acting on the environment remained profitable. This was especially important considering the high necessity of successful food crops which everyone depended on for survival. The Sun god, which traditionally headed the deities, was studied by astronomer who constructed a twelve month calendar which was linked around the agricultural practice. The Scared Valley contained two streams which were believed to be the center of the universe. The Inca population developed a canal system, straightened and walled in these water ways as a way of showing their devotion. Many people believed the waters to have a healing affect and they were therefore used not only to bath in but also for ceremonies and accompaniments to sacrifices.</p>
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<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/inca-mummy.png" align="right" alt="Johan Reinhard’s 1995 discovery of the 500-year-old Inca Ice Maiden could easily have been the apex of his life. One of the best-preserved bodies from pre-Columbian times thrilled millions worldwide, unleashing a wealth of knowledge. Her Name today: Juanita. - Photo by: Johan Gjefsen Reinhard" title="Johan Reinhard’s 1995 discovery of the 500-year-old Inca Ice Maiden could easily have been the apex of his life. One of the best-preserved bodies from pre-Columbian times thrilled millions worldwide, unleashing a wealth of knowledge. Her Name today: Juanita. - Photo by: Johan Gjefsen Reinhard" border="0">The most important celebration, during which a sacrifice of up to 200 human children were offered to the gods, was during the coronation of a new Emperor. This asserted his power over the people and his connection to the gods straight off, leaving no one in doubt of his divine right to rule. The sacrificial victims were usually about the age of ten and were taken from their families as part of the provinces’ taxation.</p>
<p>Conclusion<br />
The Inca empire was made up of a strict social organisation, laws and punishments, and religious and community commitments. With the common connection that religion provided, the empire remained centralized even with their expansion into other territories of different ethnic backgrounds. By allowing the nobility of the conquered lands to continue with their administration duties, the Incas were able to integrate new people into its system more smoothly and effectively. The Inca empire clearly reflected a dominate social structure that was flexible and for the elites, especially rewarding.</p>
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<p><b>About the Author</b><br />
Charlotte Gardner, a guest blog writer, is currently studying archaeology at the Australian National University. In her spare time she likes to read and write about eccentric historical moments. Her love of old buildings and older stories was sparked when she visited Italy. One of Charlotte&#8217;s greatest wishes is that in a few thousand years her skeleton will be dug up by an archaeological investigation team and put on display in a national museum.  You may contact Charlotte via email at: charlotteg86@gmail.com.</p>
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		<title>The Inca Empire - Part II The Army</title>
		<link>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-inca-empire-part-ii-the-army/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-inca-empire-part-ii-the-army/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Nov 2009 15:53:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Charlotte</dc:creator>
		
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/?p=4293</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Like other aspects of government and social organization, the military defense of the Inca Empire was well ordered and highly planned. The majority of evidence of warfare comes from the archaeological record which shows the high level of preparation. 

While the Inca capital city itself, Cuzco, was not surrounded by walls or fortified defenses there were fortresses built near the city which offered a number of advantages. The first advantage was the defense the fortresses gave the city people against any attackers.

These fortresses were designed to shelter the taxpayers and other nobles and provide food to the people for considerable amounts of time when all supply lines were broken. This was achievable because the majority of food warehouses were situated outside towns but within defending reach of the fortresses, There could be up to 500 warehouses in rows along hillsides containing food, clothes, and army stores such as weapons and tools. An example of this system was discovered outside the provincial town of Huanuco.

Many of these warehouses were only accessible via a window which could be reached by]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/inca-army.png" align="left" alt="The Inca Empire - The Inca Army" title="The Inca Empire - The Inca Army" border="0">Like other aspects of government and social organization, the military defense of the Inca Empire was well ordered and highly planned. The majority of evidence of warfare comes from the archaeological record which shows the high level of preparation. </p>
<p>While the Inca capital city itself, Cuzco, was not surrounded by walls or fortified defenses there were fortresses built near the city which offered a number of advantages. The first advantage was the defense the fortresses gave the city people against any attackers.</p>
<p>These fortresses were designed to shelter the taxpayers and other nobles and provide food to the people for considerable amounts of time when all supply lines were broken. This was achievable because the majority of food warehouses were situated outside towns but within defending reach of the fortresses, There could be up to 500 warehouses in rows along hillsides containing food, clothes, and army stores such as weapons and tools. An example of this system was discovered outside the provincial town of Huanuco.</p>
<p><script type="text/javascript"><!--
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<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/inca-fortress.png" align="right" alt="Pictures of the exterior wall of the Inca fortress of Sacsayhuaman, showing how the huge pieces of rock fit perfectly." title="Pictures of the exterior wall of the Inca fortress of Sacsayhuaman, showing how the huge pieces of rock fit perfectly." border="0">Many of these warehouses were only accessible via a window which could be reached by constructing stones steps leading up the wall. The second purpose of the fortresses was to control and dominate their conquered subjects. The provincial town of Paramongo was naturally defended by its topographical position but still a fortress was constructed. Other results included a store of raw material for the manufacture of public goods, supplies to relieve famine stricken or areas of crop failure and a means of providing luxury items for the ruling classes.</p>
<p>While the cities themselves were not surrounded by a wall, the royal palaces and Sun god converts were well protected in their own right. The main entrance into the Emperor’s palace considered of two doorways, the first guarded by 2000 soldiers and the second was protected by 100 captains.  Many of the homes of the nobility&#8217;s were guarded in much the same way, while the converts were guarded by high walls and a single entrance.</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/inca-trail.png" align="left" alt="Portion of the Inca Trail - El Camino Inca" title="Portion of the Inca Trail - El Camino Inca" border="0">The all important expansion of the Inca empire was based around their standing armies, forced tributary status and their extensive communication systems. While the majority of taxpayers were agriculturalists, the sheer number of male workers to draw upon enabled the Incas to maintain a standing army, so the empire was ready to respond instantaneously to any threat. This army, of course, was also able to remain continually in service because of the tribute system and warehouses which provided food for the soldiers all year round.</p>
<p>Inca history states that in the early 15th century the neighboring kingdom of Chancas marshaled an army in order to conquer the fertile Inca land. The Incas lost the battle but due to Cusi Yupanqui, the Emperor’s son, they managed to take back the lost land. He became the first Inca to accumulate land from the surrounding ethnic groups. </p>
<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/inca-trail-2.png" align="right" alt="Phuyupatamarka on the Inca Trail near Machu Picchu, Peru - photo by Steve Pastor" title="Phuyupatamarka on the Inca Trail near Machu Picchu, Peru - photo by Steve Pastor" border="0">The Inca army, which grew in size with the expansion of the empire, was mainly made up of armed foot soldiers practiced in the art of hand-to-hand combat. Their main weapon was the club which required two hands to operate but was capable of inflicting fatal head wounds. On the other hand, with the accumulation of the eastern jungle people, the bow and arrow became more common. This weapon could be used to kill enemy troops from a short distance.</p>
<p>Also, due to the large amount of manpower the Emperor was able to draw from, the Incas built and maintained extensive roads, some reaching up to 30,000–40,000 km long. These roads were only second in size to those of the Roman empire during pre-industrial civilizations. The labor needed was mainly provided by stone masons who did not need to use mortar, instead freestanding walls where built to control the flow of soldiers. These road systems allowed the army to move swiftly to all sides of the Empire. </p>
<p>For further reading see &#8216;Everyday life of the Incas&#8217; by A. Kendall.</p>
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<p><b>About the Author</b><br />
Charlotte Gardner, a guest blog writer, is currently studying archaeology at the Australian National University. In her spare time she likes to read and write about eccentric historical moments. Her love of old buildings and older stories was sparked when she visited Italy. One of Charlotte&#8217;s greatest wishes is that in a few thousand years her skeleton will be dug up by an archaeological investigation team and put on display in a national museum.  You may contact Charlotte via email at: charlotteg86@gmail.com.</p>
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		<title>The Inca Empire - Part I Administration</title>
		<link>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-inca-empire-part-i-administration/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-inca-empire-part-i-administration/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Oct 2009 15:14:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Charlotte</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[The Inca empire reached its peak in the 1500s, after emerging in under a century. From 1470 they ruled from their capital Cuzco, a vast area that reached the practicable limits of its expansion with the Amazonian rainforest to the east and the Andes to the south.

The empire was highly organized, divided into geographical, social and hierarchical groups. The empire, Taluantinsuys (Land of the Four Quarters), was divided into four provinces, or suyu, called Chinchaysuyu, Antisuyu, Cuntisuyu and Collasuyu. These quarters were then further divided into smaller provinces whose boundaries often reflected the pre-Inca divisions. This was especially so with the Empire’s rapid expansion and integration of other cultures.

At the head of the organization was the royal family ruled by the Emperor, or Child of the Sun. The Incas believed that their royal family were direct descents from the Sun god through their ancestor Manco Capac, and therefore they ruled with divine right. Each member of the royal family was known by their title, used solely by the Inca royal family. These included Auqui for an]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/machu-pichu.png" align="left" alt="The Inca Empire: Machu Pichu" title="The Inca Empire: Machu Pichu" border="0">The Inca empire reached its peak in the 1500s, after emerging in under a century. From 1470 they ruled from their capital Cuzco, a vast area that reached the practicable limits of its expansion with the Amazonian rainforest to the east and the Andes to the south.</p>
<p>The empire was highly organized, divided into geographical, social and hierarchical groups. The empire, Taluantinsuys (Land of the Four Quarters), was divided into four provinces, or suyu, called Chinchaysuyu, Antisuyu, Cuntisuyu and Collasuyu. These quarters were then further divided into smaller provinces whose boundaries often reflected the pre-Inca divisions. This was especially so with the Empire’s rapid expansion and integration of other cultures.</p>
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<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/manco-capac.png" align="right" alt="Manco Capac" title="Manco Capac" border="0">At the head of the organization was the royal family ruled by the Emperor, or Child of the Sun. The Incas believed that their royal family were direct descents from the Sun god through their ancestor Manco Capac, and therefore they ruled with divine right. Each member of the royal family was known by their title, used solely by the Inca royal family. These included Auqui for an unmarried son of the Emperor and Inca for a married son.  It was necessary to make this strict legal hierarchical system to define the next heir to the throne; the Emperor’s wives could number into the hundreds and illegitimate sons by his concubines were not eligible for the succession.</p>
<p>Anyone who wanted an audience with the Emperor had to take off his sandals and carry a “token burden” on his back, both signs of respect. The organization of the empire was so strict that everyone knew their position in the society. Under the royal family were the nobles of royal blood or nobles by Inca privilege; both groups belonged to the elite and helped govern the provinces. To help with decisions the Emperor would discuss matters with his advisers, a group of men made up of royal relatives or men who held important social positions in their native lands. </p>
<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/inca-expansion.png" align="left" alt="The Inca Empire: Map of Inca Expansion" title="The Inca Empire: Map of Inca Expansion" border="0">Administration of the empire revolved around the taxpayers, or ‘commoners’. This social group made up the majority of the Inca population and were mainly agriculturalists. These subjects were expected to pay their taxes as energy or labour. The tight social categories were rigorously enforced because they dictated who was liable to pay tribute.</p>
<p>Each province was expected to provide agreed upon amounts of tribute to the Inca government warehouses made up of the supplied energy of every agriculturalist in that area. In return the government was supposed to adjust its demands depending on the seasonal capacity of the provinces. In addition, male individuals who possessed a particular skill were exempt from contributing to the province tribute and instead was required to complete local works. These could include repairing bridges, building roads, or serving time in the army, the public work force or the mines. In this way, it was more common for towns to be build around specialist’s skills which relied on supplies from other specialists skills, for example, a bridge builder living in a town with a carpenter.</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/viracocha.png" align="right" alt="Inca Mythology: Viracocha: the creator of civilization" title="Inca Mythology: Viracocha: the creator of civilization" border="0">On the other hand, the agriculturists retained enough land to feed themselves but were close to government and the religious owned land to work on also. When it was sowing or harvesting time all other tasks, but urgent government business such as warfare, were postponed so the taxpayers could focus on the land.</p>
<p>First the lands of the Religion were worked, the community land, or Emperor’s; and, and then the taxpayers personal land. The Emperor would start the work using a golden hand plough. He would, of course, stop working after the initial ceremonial beginning, leaving the land to be worked on by the taxpayers. Each man supervised the work of his family on his appointed land plot and the first who finished his part was considered a rich man. After the harvest, the produce from the Emperor’s land was then transported and stored in warehouses for future redistribution.</p>
<p>For further reading see &#8216;Everyday life of the Incas&#8217; by A. Kendall</p>
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<p><b>About the Author</b><br />
Charlotte Gardner, a guest blog writer, is currently studying archaeology at the Australian National University. In her spare time she likes to read and write about eccentric historical moments. Her love of old buildings and older stories was sparked when she visited Italy. One of Charlotte&#8217;s greatest wishes is that in a few thousand years her skeleton will be dug up by an archaeological investigation team and put on display in a national museum.  You may contact Charlotte via email at: charlotteg86@gmail.com.</p>
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		<title>The Holy Zohar and the Influence of the Kabbalah</title>
		<link>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-holy-zohar-and-the-influence-of-the-kabbalah/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-holy-zohar-and-the-influence-of-the-kabbalah/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Oct 2009 14:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Hunter</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[Of the dozens of texts held sacred by the school of Judaic mysticism known as Kabbalah, perhaps the most important is the Sefer Hazohar, (literally the Book of Splendor.  Indeed, students of this collection of several lengthy Kabbalistic commentaries on the Torah -- most commonly known in the West as the Holy Zohar – often assign it the same stature as Judaism’s two most holy books, the Torah and the Talmud.<br /><br />
Written in an arcane form of Aramaic, the Zohar purports to have been authored by second century rabbi and prominent critic of the Roman government in years following the destruction of the Second Temple, Shimon bar Yochai.  Yochai claimed to have received the text from God himself, though most modern day scholars, however, attribute the work to Moses de Leon -- a Spanish Kabbalist who lived some eleven hundred years later.  Historians do concede, however, that, much like the books of the Bible, the disparate pieces of the Zohar were not all set down at one time.  Rather, de Leon merely was the first to recorded several different tracts of the Oral Torah that passed been down from father to son, teacher to student over the course of many generations and that Yochai could have been an initial contributor.<br /><br />
The Kabbalah’s own inborn tradition details its spread. As the Jewish Diaspora spread]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/zohar.png" align="left" alt="The Holy Zohar and the Influence of the Kabbalah" title="The Holy Zohar and the Influence of the Kabbalah" border="0">Of the dozens of texts held sacred by the school of Judaic mysticism known as Kabbalah, perhaps the most important is the Sefer Hazohar, (literally the Book of Splendor.  Indeed, students of this collection of several lengthy Kabbalistic commentaries on the Torah &#8212; most commonly known in the West as the Holy Zohar – often assign it the same stature as Judaism’s two most holy books, the Torah and the Talmud.  </p>
<p>Written in an arcane form of Aramaic, the Zohar purports to have been authored by second century rabbi and prominent critic of the Roman government in years following the destruction of the Second Temple, Shimon bar Yochai.  Yochai claimed to have received the text from God himself, though most modern day scholars, however, attribute the work to Moses de Leon &#8212; a Spanish Kabbalist who lived some eleven hundred years later.  Historians do concede, however, that, much like the books of the Bible, the disparate pieces of the Zohar were not all set down at one time.  Rather, de Leon merely was the first to recorded several different tracts of the Oral Torah that passed been down from father to son, teacher to student over the course of many generations and that Yochai could have been an initial contributor.</p>
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<p>The Kabbalah’s own inborn tradition details its spread. As the Jewish Diaspora spread throughout Europe and Eurasia after the fall of the Temple and, later, the crumbling of the Roman Empire, adepts of the “secret chain of mysteries” that is the Kabbalah brought the sacred knowledge with them, but shared it only with a select few.  It would have been in this fashion that the original text of the Zohar was secreted out of the Holy Land and into one of Spain’s many Jewish communities.</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/kabbalah.png" align="right" alt="The Holy Zohar and the Influence of the Kabbalah" title="The Holy Zohar and the Influence of the Kabbalah" border="0">And there was good reason for Jewish scholars to keep to the Zohar away from public scrutiny.  The book maintains that the Torah and, by extension, all of reality exists on two distinct levels: the exoteric and the esoteric.  It further posits that there is no one true interpretation of the Old Testament and that every soul is given – and, more importantly, encouraged &#8212; to make its own unique reading of scripture.  </p>
<p>This statement alone – which happens to share a fair amount of philosophical overlap with the similarly persecuted Gnostics &#8212; would have been viewed as heresy by the religions by Spain’s then Judeo-friendly Catholic Church and citizens.  </p>
<p>Consider then the anti-Semitism that swelled throughout the country in the years after Leon’s death.  In 1492, all Spanish Jews were forcibly expelled; those that chose to convert in order to remain found themselves facing integration the hands of the Inquisition.  And so, formal Kabbalic study was largely eradicated from the Iberian Peninsula – but not before the Zohar had managed become a key text of yet another secretive, albeit quasi-secular, sect: the European alchemists.</p>
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		<title>The Black Death in Eyam: A Case of Ill Fate</title>
		<link>http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/the-black-death-in-eyam-a-case-of-ill-fate/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Oct 2009 14:16:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Trish</dc:creator>
		
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/?p=4267</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The plague took the lives of million of Europeans from the 14<sup>th</sup> until the 17<sup>th</sup> century. In England, its destruction stayed mainly in the south of England concentrating around the poor quarters of London. But for one small village in England’s rural north, the plague would be devastating and historic. The case of the small village of Eyam in Derbyshire is famed throughout England and serves in the modern age of an example of the importance of self quarantine in the face of deadly disease.<br /><br />
It all began with the decision of the village tailor, George Viccars to purchase a box of fabric from a London dealer and bring it to Eyam to make clothes for the locals. Viccars didn’t know the box was full of fleas carrying the bubonic plague. Three days later he was dead.
<br /><br />
The village knew plague when they saw it and drastic action was taken to ensure it didn’t spread outside of the village. The village went into self induced quarantine under the guidance of the retired vicar and the serving vicar. They asked the villagers to make this sacrifice to save the lives of everyone else. The villages made the difficult moral decision and complied.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/the-great-plague-1665.png" align="left" alt="'The Great Plague 1665'. Like many who could afford to, Robert Hooke left London for six months during the worst of the bubonic plague. All cats and dogs were destroyed as a preventive measure. This allowed rats to flourish and spread the disease which was carried by their fleas. The image shows a scene of horror. After sunset carts were driven through the streets to collect the dead. They were taken to the nearest graveyard to be buried in plague pits. Fires burned to make smoke. Pipes of tobacco were smoked, posies of herbs worn and faces covered with masks. This was thought to be protection against contagion. London was overwhelmed with fear, terror and grief. It is thought that as many as 100,000 perished in London alone - painting by Rita Greer" title="'The Great Plague 1665'. Like many who could afford to, Robert Hooke left London for six months during the worst of the bubonic plague. All cats and dogs were destroyed as a preventive measure. This allowed rats to flourish and spread the disease which was carried by their fleas. The image shows a scene of horror. After sunset carts were driven through the streets to collect the dead. They were taken to the nearest graveyard to be buried in plague pits. Fires burned to make smoke. Pipes of tobacco were smoked, posies of herbs worn and faces covered with masks. This was thought to be protection against contagion. London was overwhelmed with fear, terror and grief. It is thought that as many as 100,000 perished in London alone - painting by Rita Greer" border="0">The plague took the lives of million of Europeans from the 14<sup>th</sup> until the 17<sup>th</sup> century. In England, its destruction stayed mainly in the south of England concentrating around the poor quarters of London. But for one small village in England’s rural north, the plague would be devastating and historic. The case of the small village of Eyam in Derbyshire is famed throughout England and serves in the modern age of an example of the importance of self quarantine in the face of deadly disease.</p>
<p>It all began with the decision of the village tailor, George Viccars to purchase a box of fabric from a London dealer and bring it to Eyam to make clothes for the locals. Viccars didn’t know the box was full of fleas carrying the bubonic plague. Three days later he was dead.</p>
<p>The village knew plague when they saw it and drastic action was taken to ensure it didn’t spread outside of the village. The village went into self induced quarantine under the guidance of the retired vicar and the serving vicar. They asked the villagers to make this sacrifice to save the lives of everyone else. The villages made the difficult moral decision and complied.</p>
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<p>The next few months were hard, families, men, women and children became sick and died. One woman lost her husband and six children within the space of a single week. The village lived with the disease throughout September and October of 1665, minimizing contact with each other, receiving provisions from neighboring villages who left food for them at the town boundaries and holding all public ceremonies outside to minimize the spread of the illness.</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.aurorahistoryboutique.com/images/eyam-black-death.png" align="right" alt="The Black Death in Eyam: Parish Church in Eyam, Derbyshire, England." title="The Black Death in Eyam: Parish Church in Eyam, Derbyshire, England." border="0">During that time, the small village  of Eyam with a population of approximately 700 people lost 260 of its inhabitants to the plague. The plague affected 76 different families and wiped out a few of them forever. Many households had only a single survivor who lived to tell the tale of those terrible months. </p>
<p>Many people did survive and they recorded the histories and passings of their neighbors on the front of their home and these records still exist. All the villagers learned how to bury their neighbors, friends and family members. It was a time unimaginable for most of us today as these simple country folk showed a spirit of community almost gone in these modern times.</p>
<p>Today, Eyam pays homage to those that lost their lives in 1665 with a plague museum as well as plaques on the house of the victims. The cemetery still keeps their bones and the locals still hold testament to their title of England’s “plague village.” They may have not realized it at the time but those few deaths became famed throughout England, making their way into every child’s schoolbook and taught as an example of ill fate.</p>
<p>Eyam was just one small village of the hundreds affected by the bubonic plague but its history provides a glimpse into the lives of its survivors and victims, making the epidemic more than just statistics of people who live long ago but a testament of human endurance and the belief in the sacrifice of a few to save the lives of many.</p>
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History Collectors: We offer a wide selection of museum quality replicas and authentic items representing nearly every century of the Common Era and the most significant civilizations of ancient history. Once you browse through our online catalogue, we are certain you&#8217;ll find the perfect gift for yourself or a loved one with an interest in history.
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