Just to cheer us all up in the present circumstances, and to inform the historically minded, the Smithsonian Magazine has an article about the latest interpretation of the evidence for the origins of the Black Death of the mid-fourteenth century. This places the spread of the disease back to the Mongol expansion and invasions of the thirteenth century.
The article can be read at Did the Black Death Rampage Across the World a Century Earlier Than Previously Thought?
There have been recent reports of people dying of bubonic plague after eating marmots in Mongolia as at Mongolian Couple Died of Plague After Eating Raw Marmot, at Teenage boy dies of bubonic plague in Mongolia after eating marmot | Bubonic plague, and at Mongolian Man Contracts Bubonic Plague After Eating Marmot Meat
A Mongolian marmot - cute ....or not....?
Image: RojakDaily
** Conspiracy theorists please note - Marmite is not made from marmots. I think....
> Marmite is _not_ made from marmots. I think...
ReplyDeletePerhaps not, but vegemite be .. (groan)
It has recently been suggested, and perhaps even proved (?), that Indo-European tribes who spread from the Russian steppes in all directions starting in around 4000 BC carried with them the bubonic plague.
Having some resistance to it, they were aided in their migrations by inadvertantly decimating indigenous populations who had none, analogous to later settlers bring smallpox to the Americas.
These Indo-Eauropeans were the ancestors of most later inhabitants of Europe, including Germanic and Scandinavian peoples, the Celts, and Greeks and Romans. So, despite the havoc caused by the Black Death, perhaps some residual resistance inherited from earlier times prevented it being even worse!
John Ramsden
( jhnrmsdn@yahoo.co.uk )