You are here

قراءة كتاب A History of Epidemics in Britain (Volume I of II) from A.D. 664 to the Extinction of Plague

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
A History of Epidemics in Britain (Volume I of II)
from A.D. 664 to the Extinction of Plague

A History of Epidemics in Britain (Volume I of II) from A.D. 664 to the Extinction of Plague

تقييمك:
0
No votes yet
المؤلف:
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 9

buy off the invaders. According to the account used by Higden[27], Elphege refused to sanction the payment of a ransom of three thousand pounds for his own person: he was accordingly taken from prison, and on the 13th of the Calends of May, 1010, was stoned to death by the Danes disappointed of his ransom. Therefore a pestilence fell upon the invaders, a dolor viscerum, which destroyed them by tens and twenties so that a large number perished. The earlier narrative of William of Malmesbury[28] is diversified by the introduction of a miracle, and is otherwise more circumstantial. While the archbishop was held in durance, a deadly sickness broke out among the Danes, affecting them in troops (catervatim), and proving so rapid in its effects that death ensued before they could feel pain. The stench of their unburied bodies so infected the air as to bring a plague upon those of them who had remained well. As the survivors were thrown into a panic, “sine numero, sine modo,” Elphege appeared upon the scene, and having administered to them the consecrated bread, restored them to health and put an end to the plague.

Disregarding what is fabulous, we may take these narratives to establish the fact that a swift and fatal pestilence did break out among the Danes in Kent. It had consisted probably of the same forms of camp sickness, including dysentery (as the name dolor viscerum implies), which have occurred in later times. It is the only instance of the kind recorded in the early history.

 

Medieval Famine-pestilences.

The foregoing are all the instances of pestilence in early English history, unconnected with famine, that have been collected in a search through the most likely sources. The history of English epidemics, previous to the Black Death, is almost wholly a history of famine sicknesses; and the list of such famines with attendant sickness, without mentioning the years of mere scarcity, is a considerable one.

 

TABLE OF FAMINE-PESTILENCES IN ENGLAND.

Year   Character   Authority
679   Three years’ famine in
Sussex from droughts
  Beda, Hist. Eccles. § 290
 
793   General famine and severe
mortality
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle,
sub anno. Roger of
Howden. Simeon of
Durham
 
897   Mortality of men and
cattle for three years
during and after Danish
invasion
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Florence of Worcester.
Annales Cambriae (anno
896)
 
962   Great mortality: “the great
fever in London”
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
 
976   Famine   Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Roger of Howden
 
984
986
987
  Famine. Fever of men and
murrain of cattle
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Roger of Howden.
Simeon of Durham.
Malmesbury. Gest.
Pontif. Angl. p. 171.
Flor. of Worcester.
Roger of Wendover,
Flor. Hist. Bromton
(in Twysden). Higden
 
1005   Desolation following
expulsion of Danes
  Henry of Huntingdon
 
1036
1039
  Famine   Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Henry of Huntingdon
 
1044   Famine   Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
 
1046   Very hard winter;
pestilence and
murrain
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
 
1048
1049
  Great mortality of men
and cattle
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
(sub anno 1049). Roger
of Howden. Simeon of
Durham (sub anno 1048)
 
1069   Wasting of Yorkshire   Simeon of Durham, ii. 188
 
1086
1087
  Great fever-pestilence.
Sharp famine
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Malmesbury. Henry of
Huntingdon, and most
annalists
 
1091   Siege of Durham by the
Scots
  Simeon of Durham, ii. 339
 
1093
1095
1096
1097
  Floods; hard winter;
severe famines;
universal sickness and
mortality
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Annals of Winchester.
William of
Malmesbury. Henry of
Huntingdon. Annals of
Margan. Matthew Paris,
and others
 
1103
1104
1105
  General pestilence and
murrain
  Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Roger of Wendover
 
1110
1111
  Famine   Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Roger of Wendover
 
1112   “Destructive pestilence”  

Pages