The
plague known as the Black Death devastated most of the European continent
during its peak, impacting Europe for centuries and bringing about many
economic, social and cultural changes. The Black Death was not localized in the
European continent however. It traveled
from outside of Europe, starting in Asia and making its way across the entire
continent of Europe, leaving very few areas untouched by its devastation,
carried by the people, rats, and fleas that traveled out of the plague
reservoirs in Asia.
The Black Death is often referred to
by many names in Europe: the Black Plague, the Great Mortality, the Great
Pestilence, the Great Plague, and the pestilence tyme. In the Middle East it
would be referred to the Great Destruction and the Year of Annihilation1.
The term Black Death is the preferred method of referring to the plague by
scholars but was not used until the 16th century and reached
widespread use in the 19th century.
The actual term ‘Black Death’ is thought to be a possible mistranslation
of the Latin term atra mors or pestis atra; atra can be translated into terrible, dreadful or black2.
The Black Death is considered the
second pandemic in history; the first pandemic, known as the Plague of
Justinian, originated in East Africa during the 6th century. The Plague of Justinian traveled throughout
Egypt into Palestine and Syria, spreading across the Byzantine Empire and even
reaching into Europe, where it was referred to as the Plague of Cadwallader’s
Time3. The 800 years between the first and second pandemic were not
plague free – there would be various small outbreaks in Rome, France and Spain,
confined to small areas and lasting only a few months4. However,
none of the outbreaks even approached the level that would be reached in the 14th
century.
After years of research, the origin of the
Black Death has been narrowed down to the area east of the Caspian Sea, in the
steppes and grasslands of Central Asia, an area that includes what is now
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan5. The
archaeological evidence pinpointing the Black Death to the area consists of
some ancient gravestones near the Issyk Kul Lake in what is now Kyrgyzstan6.
Another possible early victim of the plague was the Great Mongol Khan Jijaghatu
Toq-Temur; he died in 1332, along with his two sons7.
During the 1330s, China would suffer a
continuous series of natural disasters that would devastate the area: famines,
followed by drought; droughts followed by deluges. Earthquakes followed,
causing Tsincheou Mountain to partially collapse, causing more flooding. During
this time there was also a plague of locusts that destroyed the crops8.
The series of disasters caused the humans living in the area to seek refuge in
other parts of the world. However, not only humans felt the urge to escape the
horrible conditions – the black rats living in the area also sought refuge and
with them they carried Oriental rat fleas bearing the plague bacillus, Y. pestis9. This bacillus
occurred naturally among the rodent population and as they traveled with the
refugees and the merchants along the established trading routes, they spread
the bacteria.
The cause and the exact nature of the Black
Death was under much debate but has now been identified with DNA from plague
victims. The Black Death is believed to consist of the bubonic plague, as well
pneumonic and septicemic plague. Y.
pestis is the bacillus that causes all three types of plague10.
Although there has been some debate over Y.
pestis as the cause of the Black Death, DNA analysis of the bodies buried
in the mass graves located in northern, central, and southern Europe has
revealed that these people were infected by one of two different types of Y. pestis. Because of this research and
its conclusions, Y. pestis is
considered the major cause of the Black Death11. The Oriental rat
flea carries this and transmits it to the rats and humans through its bite. By
stowing away with merchants in wagons and ships, the rats carried the fleas
vast distances, enabling the widespread destruction that followed12.
The plague appears to have traveled
eastward initially, spreading farther into China (S 39). It did not begin
moving westward until the mid-1340s. The merchants traveling the Silk Road and
other trade routes contributed to the ease that the infected fleas and rats
were able to cross the vast distances away from Asia13. By 1346, the
plague had crossed the Caspian Sea, affecting some of the towns and cities that
bordered it; most importantly, it infected the citizens of Sarai, the capital
city of the Golden Horde14. The Golden Horde was a group of Mongols
that controlled Russia at the time. The Mongols carried the disease with them
when they attacked the city of Kaffa and began dying of the plague while they
besieged the city15.
Instead of fleeing, the Mongol
invaders catapulted the infected corpses and hurled them into the city.
Hundreds of bodies were hurled into the city and the corpses contaminated the
water supply and fouled the air with the stench of rotting. There is some
debate as to whether the bodies themselves transmitted the disease into Kaffa –
possibly infected those given the job of cleaning up the bodies – or was
carried there by rats and fleas that slipped in though the city walls16.
Either way, the plague infected the city and in the late summer of 1347, the
Genoese in Kaffa fled, headed towards their homes in Italy. They would not make
it. In October 1347, the 12 Genoese galleys drifted into Messina, Sicily. When
the port authorities arrived and inspected the galleys, they discovered that
the few surviving passengers were very sick – lethargic, covered in black
boils, and leaking foul-smelling fluid. The galleys were driven from Messina’s
ports, but it was too late; the plague had already been carried into Messina. The
Messinese fled to Catania, where they were quarantined in the hospital; when
they died, their bodies were buried outside of the city17.
The plague reached the mainland of Italy, such
as the ports of Genoa, Sicily, and Venice within months of infecting Sicily and
by early 1348 it had reached Florence18. Through the Mediterranean
Sea ports, the plague reached France and by the summer of 1348, it had reached
the city of Paris(S 47). Once it was on the mainland, the spread of the plague
was expeditious; according to Boccaccio, writer of The Decameron, it traveled “with the speed of a fire racing through
dry or oil substances that happened to be placed within its reach”19.
The plague overwhelmed central and western Europe and by the end of 1349, the
Black Death had spread into Switzerland, Austria, Germany, Hungary, Belgium,
and the Netherlands. It also crossed the English Channel, attacking Britain,
Scotland, and Ireland20. The path it followed continued north into
Scandanavia, even as far away as Greenland21. In 1350, the plague
swept back into Eastern Europe, reaching Moscow in 135222.
The mortality rates of the Black
Death are estimated to be between 33 percent and 60 percent of the European
population. This translates into approximately 25 million to 45 million people
in Europe alone that died from the plague23. The plague would last
from the 1340s into the 1350s, causing havoc wherever it reached, sparing only
a few areas, like Poland and Czech Republic. Because of its ability to travel
fast, hosted by a small animal that could sneak into anything and had close
contact with humans, it was almost unstoppable, only ending as it died out on
its own.
Notes
1. Martin, Sean, Black Death (Pocket Essentials,
Harpenden, 2001), 19.
2. Ibid., 19.
3. Ibid., 10.
4. Ibid., 7-8.
5. Slavicek, Loiuse Chipley, Black
Death (Chelsea House, New York, 2008), 37.
6. Ibid., 38.
7. Martin, Black Death, 14.
8. Ibid., 15.
9. Ibid., 16.
10. Slavicek, Black Death,
37.
11. Haensch, Stephanie, Rafaella
Bianucci, Michel Signoli, Minoarisoa Rajerison, Michael Schultz, Sacha Kacki,
Marco Vermunt, Darlene Weston, Derek Hurst, Mark Achtman, Elizabeth Carniel,
and Barbara Bramanti. "Distinct Clones of Yersinia pestis Caused the Black
Death," Public
Library of Science Pathogens, (2010).
12. Slavicek, Black Death,
40.
13. Ibid., 40.
14. Ibid., 40.
15. Ibid., 42.
16. Ibid., 43.
17. Martin, Black Death, 17.
18. Slavicek, Black Death,
44-45.
19. Ibid., 47.
20. Ibid., 48.
21. Ibid., 48.
22. Ibid., 48.
23. Ibid., 49.
Bibliography
Haensch,
Stephanie, Rafaella Bianucci, Michel Signoli, Minoarisoa Rajerison, Michael
Schultz, Sacha Kacki, Marco Vermunt, Darlene Weston, Derek Hurst, Mark Achtman,
Elizabeth Carniel, and Barbara Bramanti. "Distinct Clones of Yersinia
pestis Caused the Black Death." Public Library of Science Pathogens. (2010).
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2951374/?tool=pmcentrez (accessed
August 1, 2012).
Martin,
Sean. 2009. Black Death. Pocket
Essentials, 2001. eBook Collection. (accessed
August 1, 2012).
Slavicek,
Loiuse Chipley. 2008. Black Death. Chelsea House, 2008. eBook
Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost (accessed August 1, 2012).
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