History Blog About the History Blog Search History on the Web Search The History Store

History Blog

Insight into History - A Weekly Instrospective Into The Past
Find Entries

Posts Tagged ‘Bubonic plague’

20
Oct

The Black Death in Eyam: A Case of Ill Fate

   Posted by: Trish    in Cultural History, English History, European History, Historical Events, History Blog, History of England, Medieval History, World History

'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 GreerThe plague took the lives of million of Europeans from the 14th until the 17th 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.

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.

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.

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.

The Black Death in Eyam: Parish Church in Eyam, Derbyshire, England.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.

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.

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.

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.


History Store
History DVDs History DVDs
Replica Guns Replica Guns
Replica Swords Replica Swords
Scale Model Kits Scale Model Kits
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’ll find the perfect gift for yourself or a loved one with an interest in history.

Tags: 14th Century, 15th century, 1665 Plague, 16th century, 17th century, Black Death, Black Death in Eyam, Bubonic plague, deadly disease, Derbyshire, disease in the middle ages, England, fleas and bubonic plague, George Viccars, History DVDs, History Store, London, Plague, replica guns, Replica Swords, scale model kits, self quarantine, the plague

1 Comment
22
Jul

Quarantining the Black Death

   Posted by: Hunter    in Historical Events, History Blog, Medieval History, World History

Black Death - The Plague of 1348Carried from the steppes of Central Asia by freighter to modern day Italy, the bubonic plague – commonly known at the time as the Black Plague or Black Death – first reached the shores of England in 1348. Contemporary accounts from the era wager that up to fifty percent of Britain’s five million strong population fell to the unrelenting - and wholly misunderstood -pandemic.

Upon its arrival in Bristol, the bacterium quickly spread to Oxford and, then, onto London. Over the course of the next eleven years, English mass graves swelled with corpses, panic gripped the populace and doctors refused to treat to symptomatic patients out of fear for their own lives.

Initially, a government mandate ordered that any household suspected of harboring a plague victim would be subject to a forty-day quarantine that virtually guaranteed the deaths of any and all occupants within the same property. In England and across the continent, this policy was eventually extended to encompass whole towns and cities. It was a practice that did indeed yield survivors after such embargoes were lifted in population centers - though no provisions were ever undertaken taken to shield the unassuming public from the diseased rodents truly responsible for the ailment’s near global distribution.

Worldwide the Black Death would go on to kill untold millions. In aftermath of the mass fatalities, which eventually spread from the English Isles to China’s Pacific coast, where thirteen million are said to have perished, noted North African historian Ibn Khladun wrote, “It swallowed up many of the good things of civilization and wiped them out in the entire inhabited world.”

Kostnice Sedlec Ossuary in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic - this site contains approximately 40,000-70,000 human skeletons which have been artistically arranged to form decorations and furnishings for the chapel many of whom were victims of the Black Death of the mid 14th centuryThough the first major systemic outbreak of plague ended in 1359, resurgences did crop numerous times in the ensuing years, decades and centuries. England itself would be fouled by two more waves of the Black Death - first in the 1650s and later in 1665. In that year, tailor George Viccars unwittingly infected his village of Eyam after receiving a shipment of tainted cloth. The practice of quarantine was soon resurrected and the town was closed off from the outside world for months. To the surprise of both physicians and locals, approximately fifty percent of the town’s populace managed to survive the ordeal.


History Store
The Plague DVD The Plague DVD
Black Death Mini Yard Black Death Mini Yard
Scourge of the Black Death DVD Scourge of the Black Death DVD
The Plague CD-ROM Lesson Plan Set with DVD The Plague CD-ROM Lesson Plan Set with DVD
Meanwhile, in Italy, officials tried a more logical – or dastardly, depending on one’s charitable outlook - tactic. More than fifteen hundred plague victims were confined to one of the many small islands off the coast of Venice and, according to archaeologists responsible for excavating the site, it stands as the world’s first “lazaret” – a colony meant to cut off the source of an epidemic at its supposed source. The practice of relegating the contagious to a remote place would later live on into the 20th century in the form of the leper colony.

Tags: 1348, 1359, 14th century plague, 1650s, 1850s, 1865, 20th century leper colonies, Black Death, Black Death Mini Yard, Black Plague, Bubonic plague, Chapel of bones, Czech Republic, diseased rodents, history of plague prevention, Ibn Khladun, Kostnice Sedlec, kutna hora, pandemics in history, pestilence, plague in Africa, plague in Asia, plague in China, plague in Europe, plague in Great Britain, quarantine of black death, rats and plague, Scourge of the Black Death DVD, The Plague CD-ROM Lesson Plan Set with DVD, The Plague DVD

No Comments
Back to top

 

March 2010
S M T W T F S
« Feb    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

History of Your DNA!

Discover the History of Your DNA!

Archives

  • February 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008

History Links

  • American History Store
  • Ancient Egypt Store
  • Ancient Greek Store
  • Ancient History Store
  • Ancient Roman Store
  • Civil War Store
  • Colonial Store
  • History Store
  • Medieval Store
  • Museum Store
  • Pirate Store
  • Renaissance Store
  • Replica Guns
  • Replica Swords
Email Subscription

Your email address:

Subscription Options

 RSS Reader
Add to Google Reader or HomepageSubscribe in NewsGator OnlineSubscribe in BloglinesAdd to Pageflakes Receive IM, Email or Mobile alerts when new content is published on this site.
 Facebook

Historical Interest?
View Results

RSS History Blog

  • The Tribuneship of Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus
  • Ancient Pompeii?s Villa of Mysteries
  • December 8, 1941: The War with Japan Begins
  • The Battle of Mons and a Horror Writer?s Happy Ending
  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: Sherlock Holmes is Born

History Blog Sponsorship

Help keep the History Blog current. Suggest a history article or submit a small donation to help us continuously improve the historical content and features on the History Blog.

Categories

  • African History
  • Ancient History
  • Colonial History
  • Cultural History
    • Literary History
  • English History
  • Fashion History
  • French History
  • Historic Battles
  • Historical Events
  • Historical Ships
  • History Blog
  • History of England
  • History Today
  • Holiday History
  • Medieval History
  • Middle Eastern History
  • Modern History
    • Pop Culture History
  • mythology
  • Personalities in History
  • Philosophy
  • Prehistory
  • Religious History
  • Sports History
  • Technology History
    • Medical Technology
    • Military Technology
  • The Cold War
  • The Industrial Revolution
  • The Maya
  • The Renaissance
  • World History
    • American History
    • American War of Independence
    • Ancient China
    • Ancient Egypt
    • Ancient Greece
    • Ancient Rome
    • Ancient World
    • Central American History
    • European History
    • Latin American History
    • Military History
    • Native American History
    • Pirate History
    • Precolumbian History
    • South American History
    • The Aztecs
    • The French Revolution
    • The Incas
    • The Napoleonic Era
    • The Old West
    • U.S. Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
Copyright © 2008 - History Blog - is proudly powered by WordPress
Valid XHTML & CSS