Pandemic
A pandemic is a disease that affects people or animals over an extensive geographical area (from Greek pan all + demos people). Technically speaking it should cover the whole globe and affect everyone. Fortunately there has not been a pandemic in the true sense of the word.
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2 Historical pandemics 3 Concern about possible future pandemics |
Common killers and pandemics
Note that just because a disease kills a lot of people, this doesn't make it a pandemic. Many diseases, for example cancer, kill large numbers of people, but they are in fact a number of diseases lumped together for the sake of convenience.
Historical pandemics
There have been a number of significant pandemics in human history, all of them generally zoonoses that came about with domestication of animals - such as smallpox, diphtheria, influenza and tuberculosis. There have been a number of particularly significant epidemics that deserve mention above the 'mere' destruction of cities:
- Peloponnesian
War, 430
BCE. An unknown agent killed a quarter of the Athenian
troops and a quarter of the population over four years.
This fatally weakened the dominance of Athens,
but the sheer virulence of the disease prevented its wider
spread.
- Antonine Plague, 165-180.
Possibly smallpox brought back from the Near East; killed
a quarter of those infected and up to five million in all.
At the height of a second outbreak (251-266) 5,000 people
a day were said to be dying in Rome.
- Plague of Justinian, started 541.
The first recorded outbreak of the bubonic
plague. It started in Egypt
and reached Constantinople
the following spring, killing (according to the Byzantine
chronicler Procopius) 10,000 a day at its height and perhaps
40 per cent of the city's inhabitants. It went on to destroy
up to a quarter of the population of the eastern Mediterranean.
- The Black
Death, started 1300s.
Eight hundred years after the last outbreak, the bubonic
plague returned to Europe.
Starting in Asia,
the disease reached Mediterranean and western Europe in
1348 (possibly from Italian merchants fleeing fighting in
the Crimea),
and killed twenty million Europeans in six years, a quarter
of the total population and up to a half in the worst-affected
urban areas.
- Cholera
- first pandemic 1816-1826. Previously restricted to the Indian subcontinent, the pandemic began in Bengal, then spread across India by 1820. It extended as far as China and the Caspian Sea before receding.
- The second pandemic (1829-1851) reached Europe, London in 1832, New York in the same year, and the Pacific coast of North America by 1834.
- The third pandemic (1852-1860) mainly affected Russia, with over a million deaths.
- The fourth pandemic (1863-1875) spread mostly in Europe and Africa.
- The sixth pandemic (1899-1923) had little effect in Europe because of advances in public health, but Russia was badly affected again.
- The seventh pandemic began in Indonesia
in 1961, called El
Tor after the strain, and reached Bangladesh
in 1963, India in 1964, and the USSR
in 1966.
- The "Spanish
Flu", 1918-1919. Began in August 1918 in three disparate
locations: Brest,
Boston and Freetown.
An unusually severe and deadly strain of influenza
spread worldwide. The disease spread across the world, killing
25 million in the course of six months; some estimates put
the total of those killed worldwide at over twice that number.
An estimated 17 million died in India, 500,000 in the USA
and 200,000 in England. It vanished within 18 months, and
the actual strain was never determined.
Encounters between European explorers and populations in the rest of the world often introduced local epidemics of extraordinary virulence. Disease killed the entire native (Guanches) population of the Canary Islands in the 16th century. Half the native population of Hispaniola in 1518 was killed by smallpox. Smallpox also ravaged Mexico in the 1520s, killing 150,000 in Tenochtitlan alone, including the emperor, and Peru in the 1530s, aiding the European conquerors. Measles killed a further two million Mexican natives in the 1600s. As late as 1848-49, as many as 40,000 out of 150,000 Hawaiians are estimated to have died of measles, whooping cough and influenza.
There are also a number of unknown diseases that were extremely serious but have now vanished, so the etiology of these diseases cannot be established. Examples include the previously mentioned plague in 430 BCE Greece and the English Sweat in 16th-century England, which struck people down in an instant and was more greatly feared even than the bubonic plague.


