Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Black Death
Episode Date: December 30, 2023During the 14th century, the world saw one of its most traumatic episodes. A plague spread through Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa that was unlike anything the world had ever seen. ... In some locations, over half of the population died. Those who survived found themselves in a whole new world where the social and economic rules had been totally changed. Learn more about the Black Death, how it happened, and how it changed the world on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month ButcherBox Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free steak for a year and get $20 off." Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
During the 14th century, the world saw one of its most traumatic episodes.
A plague spread through Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa that was unlike anything
the world had ever seen. In some locations, over half the population died. Those who survived
found themselves in a new world where the social and economic rules had been totally changed.
Learn more about the Black Death, how it happened, and how it changed the world on this episode
of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
It is difficult to convey just how big of an impact the Black Death had on the world and especially Europe.
The Black Death wasn't like a war. As terrible as a war might be, losses are usually limited to the battlefield, and it may result in a new leader, but it probably wouldn't necessarily have affected the average person who lived in a village.
The Black Death, however, affected everyone. You couldn't hide from it. It impacted the rich and poor alike. Those who survived found themselves in a completely different world than the one they had lived in before.
In a very real sense, you can think of the Black Death as a dead.
dividing line in history. It is arguably the worst pandemic in world history, depending on how you
define it. The great dying of the Americas, which took place after the arrival of Europeans to the
new world, resulted in a dramatic drop in population size by as much as 90%. However, the great
dying took place over a period of one to two centuries. It was a multi-generational affair,
and it didn't take place everywhere at once, and it wasn't a single pandemic of a single disease.
The Black Death, however, was like a single bomb that devastated much of Europe in the Middle East during a single decade.
Before we get into the details of the Black Death, I should explain exactly what it was and what caused it.
The Black Death was a Bubonic Plague pandemic that took place between approximately 1346 and 1353.
Bubonic plague is a bacterial disease caused by the bacteria Yersinia pestis.
The bacteria normally can be found in small mammals and the fleas that live on them.
The bacteria is usually transmitted through flea bites and through the handling of infected animals.
Bubonic plague is a particularly nasty disease with a very high mortality rate.
People who are infected usually begin to show symptoms after two to six days.
The most notable symptom is the appearance of one or more swollen, tender, and painful lymph nodes
usually found in the groin, armpit, or neck.
Inflamed lymph nodes are also.
known as Bubos, which is where the name Bubonic Plague is derived. There are actually three different
types of plagues that all stem from the Yersinia pestis bacteria. Bubonic plague, septicemic plague,
and pneumonic plague. Each plague type can develop depending on the location of the infection and
the way it was transmitted, and one plague type can also morph into another. What makes Bubonic Plague
so dangerous is its exceptionally high mortality rate. To put it into perspective,
The SARS-COV-2 virus that caused the recent pandemic had an overall mortality rate of less than 1%,
with significant variation between age groups and people with pre-existing conditions.
Smallpox had a mortality rate of 20 to 30% for the most common strain of the virus.
Bubonic plague, however, had mortality rates between 30 to 90%, and death would often occur in less than 10 days after symptoms appeared.
That was why the black death was so terrifying.
If someone showed symptoms, they could be dead in just a few days after suffering excruciating pain.
So how did this bacteria, carried by fleas, managed to cause the worst pandemic in human history?
Needless to say, data and record keeping in the 14th century wasn't great.
So what we know of the origins of the disease and its spread has been determined through historical
research and microbiological detective work.
It's thought that the bacterians originated in either the grassy steps of Asia or possible.
China. There it was passed from small animals that had little contact with humans. What human
contact there was was mostly amongst nomadic tribes who kept their distance from other people.
With the rise of the Mongol Empire, however, these pathogens now had a vector outside of the steps.
Over a period of decades, the bacteria, probably carried by rats, made its way out of the steps
through trade routes until it eventually made its way onto ships. The plague of Justinian,
which took place in the seventh century, of which I've done,
a previous episode might have been an outbreak of bubonic plague, or it might have been smallpox.
There may have been outbreaks of bubonic plague in Asia before it reached Europe. There were
epidemics in China from 1308 to 1347, but they were often attributed to diseases that spread
in the aftermath of floods and famine. Likewise, there were multiple epidemics during the Yuan
dynasty, up to, concurrent with, and after the Black Death in Europe. Many of these outbreaks were
just as bad as what happened in Europe. But we don't know if this was bubonic plague. If it was,
in fact, bubonic plague, then the disease spread in ways very different than the disease spread in Europe,
and it may have been a different strain of the bacteria. The epidemics in this period of Chinese history
were certainly important, but I'm going to leave those for a future episode. The first recorded
case in Europe supposedly came from Genoese traders who came from the port of Khafa, located in the
Crimean Peninsula, which at the time was controlled by the Mongol Golden Horde.
In 1345 and 1346, the Mongols laid siege to the city by tossing plague-ridden corpses into it.
When the plague took cold, the Genoese fled the city and arrived in Constantinople,
where the plague arrived with them in the summer of 1347.
And I should note that rats were common on ships in this era,
and they allowed for far more rapid transmission of the disease than otherwise would have been possible.
In Constantinople, the plague actually killed the 13-year-old Byzantine emperor,
and then it began spreading to other trading cities.
The Genoese crew finally arrived in Sicily at the port of Messina.
When they docked, dock workers found the ship filled with dead or infected sailors.
They immediately sent the ship away, but the damage had already been done.
The plague ravaged Sicily and began to spread throughout Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East.
One of the big questions was how it managed to spread so fast.
If the only transmission vector was fleas on rats,
should not have spread as fast as it did.
One theory holds that the disease was also spread from person to person.
It might have gone airborne as bubonic plague can develop into pneumonic plague, which is an
infection of the lungs.
If people spread it, then it could have been transmitted back to fleas and lice by infected
people.
Nonetheless, it spread rapidly, and the results were devastating.
When it arrived in a town or village, the death tolls were sometimes astronomical.
In the city of Florence, Italy, 90% of the population died.
There were so many dead that there weren't enough living to bury the dead.
There were villages in France that were completely wiped out to the last person.
The villages became reclaimed by nature, and it was only through modern observational techniques that the villages were eventually discovered.
Not every community had death tolls that were that high, but even when they weren't that high, they were still astounding compared to any other pandemic.
There are modern theories as well as to why the pandemic was so deadly.
One theory holds that the bacteria mutated somewhere between Central Asia and Europe.
Samples of plague bacteria have been found in Kazakhstan and they differ genetically from those found in Europe.
A second theory holds that there may have been a secondary pandemic taking place alongside the plague.
Anthrax has been found in the graves of plague victims.
If anthrax had been spreading along with the plague, it would have resulted in a deadly double whammy that would have been almost
impossible to recover from. Other reasons had to do with the conditions of the time.
Hygiene was horrible. Cities and villages were often open sewers which were breeding grounds for
rats. People seldom bathed and lice was very common. Fleees often lived in clothing and bedding
that people used. Regardless of the reason, no one had a clue why this was happening or what caused
the disease. The germ theory of disease didn't exist at the time and wouldn't for almost another 500 years.
Various theories were floated, all of which, if they were offered up today, would be considered
medical quackery. The prevailing theory was that of miasma. Myasma was thought to be vapors in the
air that caused the disease, and doctors at the time wore long, beak-shaped headdresses that were
thought to keep the miasma away. While miasma was the dominant theory amongst European
physicians, it was far from universal. Many people pointed to supernatural explanations. Many
Christian theologians thought that the plague was a punishment from God and that those who suffered
shouldn't be treated because they were sinners. Over in the Middle East, Islamic scholars thought that
Allah sent the plague to bring people into paradise, and for that reason, doctors shouldn't treat
patients. There were also conspiracies. A popular target in Europe were Jews. They were accused
of poisoning wells, which supposedly caused the pandemic. This resulted in widespread persecution
of Jews with almost 200 Jewish communities being destroyed across the continent.
Many Jews eventually migrated to Poland where King Casimir III welcomed them.
People with leprosy were often attacked, as they were thought to be the cause of the illness.
Because of the staggering number of dead, burial practices changed everywhere.
Cremation was a practice that had largely ceased with the rise of Christianity in the Roman Empire,
but it returned as a way to destroy corpses.
Likewise, mass graves became a necessity because digging individual graves was no longer possible
because there was nobody to dig the graves.
Eventually, the Black Death began to burn itself out.
Those who survived either had a natural or acquired immunity to the disease.
Also, the bacteria once again mutated into a more benign form,
as highly lethal pathogens tend to do,
lest they ran out of hosts in which they can spread.
One genetic analysis showed that prior to the Black Death,
about 0.2% of Europeans had genes that could resist the disease.
Today, the number of people of European descent with that genetic resistance is approximately 15%.
This is almost entirely due to survivors being able to pass down that genetic trade.
The world after the Black Death was one that was completely changed.
In fact, I'm probably going to do a follow-up episode at some point about just how much the Black Death
changed the social, economic, and cultural institutions that existed at the time.
Suffice to say, there weren't as many people which resulted in labor shortages.
serfs who were previously tied to the land where they worked just up and left for better opportunities.
Wages rose and in the years immediately following the Black Death, the overall standard of living actually went up, assuming you had managed to survive.
Likewise, institutions like the Catholic Church went through changes.
Traditional medicine proved to be a failure and the long process of developing scientifically based modern medicine began.
There were peasant revolts and governments changed, usually in the form of weakening local lords.
One of the things that may shock people is that bubonic plague is not a thing of the past.
There were many pandemics of the plague after the Black Death, and there are still cases that arise today.
However, none of these cases were ever as bad as the Black Death.
The Great Plague of London broke out in 1665 and 1666.
In 1855, an epidemic broke out in the Yunnan province of China, which eventually spread to India,
killing 15 million people in the two countries.
In 1894, there was an outbreak in Hong Kong.
and smaller outbreaks occurred in 1900 in San Francisco and 1924 in Los Angeles.
As recently as 1994, an outbreak of bubonic plague in India resulted in over 700 infections and 52 deaths.
Even in the 21st century, there are cases of bubonic plague that still occasionally appear.
Every year, a handful of cases appear in diverse places such as the American Southwest, Australia, Madagascar, India, and China.
The odds of another bubonic plague pandemic occurring are pretty close to zero.
We now know what causes the disease, how to treat it, and how to stop its spread.
Hygiene is also much better today than it was in the past, meaning the conditions for its spread no longer exist.
If bubonic plague is diagnosed early, it can be easily treated.
The Black Death is considered to be the worst pandemic in human history.
The global death toll from it ranges from $25 million to as high as $70,000.
million. The wide range is due to the poor record keeping of the time. That loss of life
resulted in a loss of population just in Europe of between 30 to 60% of the entire population.
The drop in population was so great that it took over 200 years for population levels to
return to the levels from before the Black Death. The executive producer of Everything
Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiefer.
Today's first review comes from listener Pueblo Frank over on Apple Podcasts in the United States.
They write,
Great way to start the day.
This podcast covers a huge variety of topics in a concise and upbeat manner.
Love the format and approach.
The second review also comes from Apple Podcasts in the United States.
This is from listener, Love Your Show, Smiley Face emoji, Smiley Face emoji with hearts in the eyes.
They say, wow, amazing show, informational, fact-filled, interesting, amazing,
love it. And another emoji. Thanks, both of you. And remember, if you leave a review or send me a
boostagram, you two can have it read on the show.
