Plague is a deadly
infectious disease caused by the
enterobacteria Yersinia pestis (Pasteurella pestis).
Primarily carried by rodents (most notably
rats) and spread to humans via fleas, the disease is
notorious throughout history, due to the unrivaled scale of death
and devastation it brought. Plague is still
endemic in some parts of the
world.
Name
The epidemiological use of the term
plague is currently
applied to bacterial infections that cause
buboes, although historically the medical use of
the term plague has been applied to
pandemic infections in general. Plague is often
synonymous with "
bubonic plague" but
this only describes one of its manifestations. Other names have
been used to describe this disease, such as "The Black Plague" and
"The Black Death"; the latter is now used primarily to describe the
second, and most devastating, pandemic of the disease.
Infection and transmission
Contrary to popular belief, rats did not directly start the spread
of the Bubonic plague. It is mainly a disease in the
fleas (
Xenopsylla
cheopis) that infested the rats, making the rats
themselves the first victims of the plague. Infection in a human
occurs when a person is bitten by a flea that has been infected by
biting a rodent that itself has been infected by the bite of a flea
carrying the disease. The bacteria multiply inside the flea,
sticking together to form a plug that blocks its stomach and causes
it to starve. The flea then bites a host and continues to feed,
even though it cannot quell its hunger, and consequently the flea
vomits blood tainted with the bacteria back into the bite wound.
The bubonic plague bacterium then infects a new victim, and the
flea eventually dies from starvation. Serious outbreaks of plague
are usually started by other disease outbreaks in rodents, or a
rise in the rodent population.
In 1894,
two bacteriologists, Alexandre Yersin of France
and Shibasaburo Kitasato of Japan
,
independently isolated the bacterium in Hong Kong
responsible for the Third
Pandemic. Though both investigators reported their
findings, a series of confusing and contradictory statements by
Kitasato eventually led to the acceptance of Yersin as the primary
discoverer of the organism.
Yersin named it Pasteurella
pestis in honor of the Pasteur Institute
, where he worked, but in 1967 it was moved to a new
genus, renamed Yersinia
pestis in honor of Yersin. Yersin also noted that
rats were affected by plague not only during plague epidemics but
also often preceding such epidemics in humans, and that plague was
regarded by many locals as a disease of rats: villagers in China
and India
asserted
that, when large numbers of rats were found dead, plague outbreaks
soon followed.
In 1898,
the French scientist Paul-Louis
Simond (who had also come to China
to battle
the Third Pandemic) established the
rat-flea vector that drives
the disease. He had noted that persons who became ill did
not have to be in close contact with each other to acquire the
disease.
In Yunnan, China
, inhabitants would flee from their homes as soon as
they saw dead rats, and on the island of Formosa
(Taiwan
), residents
considered the handling of dead rats heightened the risks of
developing plague. These observations led him to suspect
that the flea might be an intermediary factor in the transmission
of plague, since people acquired plague only if they were in
contact with recently dead rats, who had died less than 24 hours
before. In a now classic experiment, Simond demonstrated how a
healthy rat died of plague after infected fleas had jumped to it
from a rat who had recently died of the plague.
Pathology
Bubonic plague
When a flea bites a human and contaminates the wound with
regurgitated blood, the plague carrying bacteria are passed into
the tissue.
Y. pestis can reproduce inside cells, so even
if
phagocytosed, they can still
survive. Once in the body, the bacteria can enter the
lymphatic system, which drains
interstitial fluid. Plague bacteria
secrete several
toxins, one of which is known
to cause dangerous
beta-adrenergic
blockade.
Y. pestis spreads through the lymphatics of the infected
human until it reaches a
lymph node,
where it stimulates severe
haemorrhagic
inflammation that causes the lymph
nodes to expand. The expansion of lymph nodes is the cause of the
characteristic "bubo" associated with the disease.
Septicemic plague
Lymphatics ultimately drain into the bloodstream, so the plague
bacteria may enter the blood and travel to almost any part of the
body. In
septicemic plague, bacterial
endotoxins cause
disseminated
intravascular coagulation (DIC), causing tiny clots throughout
the body and possibly ischaemic necrosis (tissue death due to lack
of circulation/perfusion to that tissue) from the clots. DIC
results in depletion of the body's clotting resources, so that it
can no longer control bleeding. Consequently, there is bleeding
into the skin and other organs, which can cause red and/or black
patchy rash and hemoptysis/haemoptysis (coughing up or
vomiting of blood). There are bumps on the skin
that look somewhat like insect bites; these are usually red, and
sometimes white in the center. Untreated, septicemic plague is
usually fatal. Early treatment with
antibiotics reduces the mortality rate to
between 4 and 15 percent. People who die from this form of plague
often die on the same day symptoms first appear.
Pneumonic plague
The
pneumonic plague infects the
lungs, and with that infection comes the possibility of
person-to-person transmission through respiratory droplets. The
incubation period for pneumonic plague is usually between two and
four days, but can be as little as a few hours. The initial
symptoms, of headache, weakness, and coughing with
hemoptysis, vomiting blood, are indistinguishable
from other respiratory illnesses. Without diagnosis and treatment,
the infection can be fatal in one to six days; mortality in
untreated cases is approximately 100%.
Other forms
There are a few other rare manifestations of plague, including
asymptomatic plague and abortive plague.
Cellulocutaneous
plague sometimes results in infection of the skin and soft
tissue, often around the bite site of a flea.
Plague
meningitis can occur in very rare cases of septicemic
plague.
Treatments
Vladimir Havkin, a doctor of
Russian-Jewish origin who worked in India, was the first to invent
and test a
bubonic plague
vaccine, on January 10, 1897.
The traditional treatments are:
- Streptomycin 30 mg/kg IM twice daily for 7 days
- Chloramphenicol 25–30 mg/kg
single dose, followed by 12.5–15 mg/kg four times daily
- Tetracycline 2 g single dose,
followed by 500 mg four times daily for 7–10 days (not
suitable for children)
More recently,
- Gentamicin 2.5 mg/kg IV or IM twice
daily for 7 days
- Doxycycline 100 mg (adults) or
2.2 mg/kg (children) orally twice daily have also been shown
to be effective.
History

Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665),
French.
The Plague of Ashdod, 1630.
Oil on canvas, 148 x 198 cm.
Musée du Louvre, Paris, France, Giraudon/Bridgeman Art
Library.
The earliest account describing a possible plague
epidemic is found in I Samuel 5:6 of the
Hebrew Bible (
Tanakh).
In this
account, the Philistines of Ashdod
were
stricken with a plague for the crime of stealing the Ark of the Covenant from the Children of
Israel. These events have been dated to approximately the
second half of the eleventh century B.C. The word "
tumors" is used in most
English translations to
describe the sores that came upon the Philistines. The
Hebrew, however, can be interpreted as
"swelling in the secret parts". The account indicates that the
Philistine city and its political territory were stricken with a
"ravaging of mice" and a plague, bringing death to a large segment
of the population.
In the
second year of the Peloponnesian
War (430 B.C.), Thucydides described
an epidemic disease which was said to have begun in Ethiopia
, passed through Egypt
and Libya
, then come
to the Greek world. In the
Plague of Athens, the city lost possibly
one third of its population, including
Pericles. Modern historians disagree on whether the
plague was a critical factor in the loss of the war. Although this
epidemic has long been considered an outbreak of plague, many
modern scholars believe that
typhus,
smallpox, or
measles may
better fit the surviving descriptions. A recent study of the DNA
found in the dental pulp of plague victims, led by Manolis J.
Papagrigorakis, suggests that
typhoid was
actually responsible. Other scientists dispute this conclusion,
alleging serious methodological flaws in the DNA study.
In the
first century A.D., Rufus of
Ephesus, a Greek anatomist, refers to an outbreak of plague in
Libya
, Egypt
, and
Syria
. He records that Alexandrian doctors named
Dioscorides and Posidonius described symptoms including acute
fever, pain, agitation, and delirium. Buboes—large, hard, and
non-suppurating—developed behind the knees, around the elbows, and
"in the usual places." The death toll of those infected was very
high.
Rufus also wrote that similar buboes were
reported by a Dionysius Curtus, who may have practiced medicine in
Alexandria
in the third century B.C. If this is correct,
the eastern Mediterranean
world may have been familiar with bubonic plague at
that early date.
First Pandemic: Plague of Justinian
The
Plague of Justinian in A.D.
541–542 is the first known attack on record, and marks the first
firmly recorded pattern of bubonic plague. This outbreak is thought
to have originated in Ethiopia.
The huge city of Constantinople
imported massive amounts of grain, mostly from
Egypt, to feed its citizens. The grain ships were the source
of contagion for the city, with massive public granaries nurturing
the rat and flea population. At its peak the plague was killing
10,000 people in Constantinople every day and ultimately destroyed
perhaps 40% of the city's inhabitants. It went on to destroy up to
a quarter of the human population of the eastern
Mediterranean.
In A.D. 588 a second major wave of plague spread through the
Mediterranean into what is now France. It is estimated that the
Plague of Justinian killed as
many as 100 million people across the world. It caused
Europe's population to drop by around
50% between 541 and 700. It also may have contributed to the
success of the
Arab conquests. An
outbreak of it in the A.D. 560s was described in A.D. 790 as
causing "swellings in the glands...in the manner of a nut or date"
in the groin "and in other rather delicate places followed by an
unbearable fever". While the swellings in this description have
been identified by some as buboes, there is some contention as to
whether the pandemic should be attributed to the bubonic plague,
Yersinia pestis, known in modern times.
Second Pandemic: Black Death
1347 to 1351, the
Black Death, a massive
and deadly
pandemic originated in Central
Asia, swept through Asia, Europe and Africa. It may have reduced
the world's population from 450 million to between 350 and 375
million.
China
lost around
half of its population, from around 123 million to around 65
million; Europe around 1/3 of its population,
from about 75 million to about 50 million; and Africa approximately 1/8th of its population, from
around 80 million to 70 million (mortality rates tended to be
correlated with population density so Africa, being less dense
overall, had the lowest rate). This makes the Black Death
the largest death toll from any known non-viral epidemic. Although
accurate statistical data does not exist, it is thought that 1.4
million died in England (1/3 of England's 4.2 million people),
while an even higher percentage of Italy's population was likely
wiped out. On the other hand, Northeastern Germany, Bohemia, Poland
and Hungary are believed to have suffered less, and there are no
estimates available for Russia or the Balkans. It is conceivable
that Russia may not have been as affected due to its very cold
climate and large size, hence often less close contact with the
contagion.
The Black Death contributed to the destruction of the feudal system
in Medieval Time. As more serfs and workers died, there were fewer
people to work for the nobles and they had to give higher wages to
the workers willing to work on the nobles' lands. The Black Death
also killed many great kings and nobles.In its aftermath, the Black
Death may also have favoured the use of more advanced farming tools
as a smaller workforce was available and plots grew larger as a
result of the population loss.
The plague continued to strike parts of
Europe sporadically until the 17th century, each time
with reduced intensity and fatality, suggesting an increased
resistance due to
natural
selection. Some have also argued that changes in hygiene habits
and efforts to improve public health and sanitation had a
significant impact on the falling rates of infection.
Nature of the disease
In the early 20th century, following the identification by Yersin
and Kitasato of the plague bacterium that caused the late 19th and
early 20th century Asian bubonic plague (the
Third Pandemic), most scientists and
historians came to believe that the Black Death was an incidence of
this plague, with a strong presence of the more contagious
pneumonic and septicemic varieties increasing the pace of
infection, spreading the disease deep into inland areas of the
continents.
It was claimed that the disease was spread
mainly by black rats in Asia and that
therefore there must have been black rats in north-west Europe at
the time of the Black Death to spread it, although black rats are
currently rare except near the Mediterranean
. This led to the development of a theory
that
brown rats had invaded Europe,
largely wiping out black rats, bringing the plagues to an end,
although there is no evidence for the theory in historical records.
Some historians suggest that
marmots, rather
than
rats, were the primary carriers of the
disease. The view that the Black Death was caused by
Yersinia
pestis has been incorporated into medical textbooks throughout
the 20th century and has become part of popular culture, as
illustrated by recent books, such as John Kelly's
The Great
Mortality.
Many modern researchers have argued that the disease was more
likely to have been viral (that is, not bubonic plague), pointing
to the absence of rats from some parts of Europe that were badly
affected and to the conviction of people at the time that the
disease was spread by direct human contact. According to the
accounts of the time the black death was extremely virulent, unlike
the 19th and early 20th century bubonic plague. Samuel K. Cohn has
made a comprehensive attempt to rebut the bubonic plague theory. In
the Encyclopedia of Population, he points to five major weaknesses
in this theory:
- very different transmission speeds — the Black Death was
reported to have spread 385 km in 91 days in 664, compared to
12–15 km a year for the modern Bubonic Plague, with the
assistance of trains and cars
- difficulties with the attempt to explain the rapid spread of
the Black Death by arguing that it was spread by the rare pneumonic
form of the disease — in fact this form killed less than 0.3% of
the infected population in its worst outbreak (Manchuria in 1911)
- different seasonality — the modern plague
can only be sustained at temperatures between 10 and 26° C and
requires high humidity, while the Black Death occurred even in
Norway
in the
middle of the winter and in the Mediterranean in the middle of hot
dry summers
- very
different death rates — in several places (including Florence
in 1348) over 75% of the population appears to have
died; in contrast the highest mortality for the modern Bubonic
Plague was 3% in Mumbai
in
1903
- the cycles and trends of infection were very different between
the diseases — humans did not develop resistance to the modern
disease, but resistance to the Black Death rose sharply, so that
eventually it became mainly a childhood disease
Cohn also points out that while the identification of the disease
as having buboes relies on accounts of
Boccaccio and others, they described
buboes,
abscesses,
rashes and
carbuncles
occurring all over the body, the neck or behind the ears. In
contrast, the modern disease rarely has more than one bubo, most
commonly in the groin, and is not characterised by abscesses,
rashes and carbuncles.
Researchers have offered a mathematical model based on the changing
demography of Europe from 1000 to 1800 AD demonstrating how plague
epidemics, 1347 to 1670, could have provided the selection pressure
that raised the frequency of a mutation to the level seen today
that prevent HIV from entering
macrophages that carry the
mutation (the average frequency of this
allele is 10% in European populations). It is
suggested that the original single mutation appeared over 2,500
years ago and that persistent epidemics of a
haemorrhagic fever struck at the early
classical civilizations.
Third Pandemic
The
Third Pandemic began in China
in 1855,
spreading plague to all inhabited continents and ultimately killing
more than 12 million people in India
and China
alone. Casualty patterns indicate that waves of this
pandemic may have come from two different sources. The first was
primarily
bubonic and was carried around the
world through ocean-going trade, transporting infected persons,
rats, and cargoes harboring fleas. The second, more virulent strain
was primarily
pneumonic in
character, with a strong person-to-person contagion.
This strain was
largely confined to Manchuria and Mongolia
. Researchers during the "Third Pandemic"
identified plague vectors and the plague bacterium (see above),
leading in time to modern treatment methods.
Plague
occurred in Russia
in 1877–1889
in rural areas near the Ural Mountains
and the Caspian Sea
. Efforts in hygiene and patient isolation
reduced the spread of the disease, with approximately 420 deaths in
the region. Significantly, the region of
Vetlianka in this area is near a population of the
bobak marmot, a small rodent considered
a very dangerous plague reservoir.
The last significant Russian outbreak of
Plague was in Siberia
in 1910 after sudden demand for Marmot skins (a
substitute for Sable) increased the price by
400 percent. The traditional hunters would not hunt a sick
Marmot and it was taboo to eat the fat from under the arm (the
axillary
lymphatic gland that often
harboured the plague) so outbreaks tended to be confined to single
individuals.
The price increase, however, attracted
thousands of Chinese
hunters from
Manchuria who not only caught the sick
animals but ate the fat which was considered a delicacy. The
plague spread from the hunting grounds to the terminus of the
Chinese Eastern Railway and
then followed the track for 2,700 km. The plague lasted 7
months and killed 60,000 people.
The bubonic plague continued to circulate through different ports
globally for the next fifty years; however, it was primarily found
in Southeast Asia.
An epidemic in Hong Kong
in 1894 had particularly high death rates,
90%. As late as 1897, medical authorities in the
European powers organized a conference in Venice
, seeking
ways to keep the plague out of Europe. Mumbai plague epidemic struck the
city of Mumbai
(Bombay) in
1896. The disease reached the Republic of
Hawaii
in December 1899, and the Board of Health’s decision to
initiate controlled burns of select buildings in Honolulu
’s Chinatown turned into an
uncontrolled fire which led to the inadvertent burning of most of
Chinatown on January 20, 1900 according to the Star Bulletin's Feature on the Great Chinatown
Fire. Plague persisted in Hawaii on the outer islands of
Maui and Hawaii (The Big Island) until it was finally eradicated in
1959.
Plague finally reached the United States
later that year in San
Francisco
.
Although
the outbreak that began in China
in 1855 is
conventionally known as the Third
Pandemic, (the First being the Plague of Justinian and the second being
the Black Death), it is unclear whether there have been fewer, or
more, than three major outbreaks of bubonic plague. Most
modern outbreaks of bubonic plague amongst humans have been
preceded by a striking, high mortality amongst rats, yet this
phenomenon is absent from descriptions of some earlier plagues,
especially the Black Death. The buboes, or swellings in the groin,
that are especially characteristic of bubonic plague, are a feature
of other diseases as well.
Plague as a biological weapon
Plague has a long history as a
biological weapon. Historical accounts
from
ancient China and
medieval Europe detail the use of infected
animal carcasses, such as cows or horses, and human carcasses, by
the
Xiongnu/
Huns,
Mongols,
Turks, and other groups, to contaminate enemy
water supplies.
Han Dynasty General
Huo Qubing is recorded to have died of
such a contamination while engaging in warfare against the Xiongnu.
Plague victims were also reported to have been tossed by
catapult into cities under siege.
In 1347,
the Genoese possession of Caffa, a great trade emporium on the Crimean
peninsula, came under siege by an army of Mongol warriors of the Golden
Horde under the command of Janibeg. After a protracted siege during
which the Mongol army was reportedly withering from the disease,
they decided to use the infected corpses as a biological weapon.
The corpses were catapulted over the city walls, infecting the
inhabitants. The Genoese traders fled, transferring the plague
(
Black Death) via their ships into the
south of
Europe, whence it rapidly
spread.
During
World War II, the
Japanese Army developed weaponised
plague, based on the breeding and release of large numbers of
fleas. During the Japanese occupation of
Manchuria,
Unit 731
deliberately infected
Chinese,
Korean, and Manchurian
civilians and
prisoners of war with the plague
bacterium. These subjects, termed "maruta", or "logs", were then
studied by
dissection, others by
vivisection while
still conscious. Members of the unit such as
Shiro Ishii were exonerated from the
Tokyo tribunal by
Douglas MacArthur but twelve of them were
prosecuted in the
Khabarovsk
War Crime Trials in 1949 during which some admitted having
spread
Bubonic plague within a 36-km
radius around the city of
Changde.
After
World War II, both the United States
and the Soviet Union
developed means of weaponising pneumonic
plague. Experiments included various delivery methods,
vacuum drying, sizing the bacterium, developing strains resistant
to antibiotics, combining the bacterium with other diseases (such
as
diphtheria), and genetic engineering.
Scientists who worked in USSR
bio-weapons programs have stated that the Soviet
effort was formidable and that large stocks of weaponised plague
bacteria were produced. Information on many of the Soviet
projects is largely unavailable. Aerosolized pneumonic plague
remains the most significant threat. The plague can be easily
treated with antibiotics, thus a widespread
epidemic is highly unlikely in developed
countries.

Worldwide distribution of plague
infected animals 1998
1994 epidemic in Surat, India
In 1994,
there was a pneumonic plague epidemic in Surat
, India
that
resulted in 52 deaths and in a large internal migration of about
300,000 residents, who fled fearing quarantine.
A combination of heavy monsoon rain and clogged sewers led to
massive flooding which resulted in unhygienic conditions and a
number of uncleared animal carcasses. It is believed that this
situation precipitated the epidemic. There was widespread fear that
the flood of refugees might spread the epidemic to other parts of
India and the world, but that scenario was averted, probably as a
result of effective public health response mounted by the Indian
health authorities.
Much like the
Black Death that spread
through medieval Europe, some questions still remain unanswered
about the 1994 epidemic in Surat.
Initial questions about whether it was an epidemic of plague arose
because the Indian health authorities were unable to culture
Yersinia pestis, but this could have been due to poor
laboratory procedures. Yet, there are several lines of evidence
strongly suggesting that it was a plague epidemic: blood tests for
Yersinia were positive, a number of individuals showed antibodies
against Yersinia and the clinical symptoms displayed by the
affected were all consistent with the disease being plague.
Other contemporary cases
Two
non-plague Yersinia - Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and
Yersinia enterocolitica - still exist in fruit and
vegetables from the Caucasus Mountains
east across southern Russia
and Siberia
, to Kazakhstan
, Mongolia
, and parts of China
; in Southwest and Southeast Asia, Southern and East
Africa (including the island of Madagascar
); in North America,
from the Pacific
Coast
eastward to the western Great Plains
, and from British Columbia
south to Mexico
; and in
South America in two areas: the
Andes mountains and Brazil
.
There is no plague-infected animal population in
Europe or
Australia.
- From
1995 to 1998, annual outbreaks of plague were witnessed in Mahajanga
, Madagascar as per a study done by Pascal Boisier
and other scientists and published in Emerging Infectious Diseases
journal in March 2002.
- In
the U.S., about half of all food cases of plague since 1970 have
occurred in New
Mexico
. There were 2 plague deaths in the state in
2006, the first fatalities in 12 years.
- In Fall of 2002, a New Mexico couple contracted the disease,
just prior to a visit to New York City. They both were treated by
antibiotics, but the male required amputation of both feet to fully
recover, due to the lack of blood flow to his feet, cut off by the
bacteria.
- On
April 19, 2006, CNN News and others
reported a case of plague in Los Angeles
, California
, lab technician Nirvana Kowlessar, the first
reported case in that city since 1984.
- In May 2006, AZ Central
reported a case of plague found in a cat.
- On
May 16, 2007, an 8-year-old hooded
capuchin monkey in the Denver Zoo
died of the bubonic plague. Five squirrels
and a rabbit were also found dead on zoo grounds and tested
positive for the disease.
- On June 5, 2007 in Torrance County, New Mexico a 58 year old
woman developed bubonic plague, which progressed to pneumonic plague.
- On
November 2, 2007, Eric York, a 37 year old wildlife biologist for
the National Park Service's and The Felidae
Conservation Fund, was found dead in his home at Grand Canyon
National Park
. On October 27, York performed a necropsy on
a mountain lion that had likely
perished from the disease and three days afterward York complained
of flu-like symptoms and called in sick from work. He was treated
at a local clinic but was not diagnosed with any serious ailment.
The discovery of his death sparked a minor health scare, with
officials stating he likely died of either plague or hantavirus, and 49 people who had come in to
contact with York were given aggressive antibiotic treatments. None
of them fell ill. Autopsy results released on November 9, confirmed
the presence of Y. pestis in his body, confirming plague
as a likely cause of death.
- In January 2008, at least 18 people died of bubonic plague in
Madagascar.
- On January 19, 2009, British newspaper The
Sun reported an Al-Qaeda training camp
in Algeria had been wiped out by the plague, killing approximately
40 Islamic extremists.
- On
June 16, 2009, Libyan authorities have reported an outbreak of
bubonic plague in the Libyan town Tobruk
.
16-18 cases were reported, including one death.
Literary and popular culture references
- The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio (1350). Takes place in
Florence in 1348, during the outbreak of the Black Death.
- Romeo and Juliet
(1597) Friar John was unable to go to Mantua and deliver a letter
to Romeo because of Bubonic Plague quarantine.
- A Journal of the
Plague Year by Daniel Defoe
(1722). A
fictional first hand account of the London
outbreak
of 1665. Probably based on the experiences of Defoe's
uncle.
- "The Masque of the Red
Death" (1842) by Edgar Allan Poe
includes a vivid description of pestilence that some scholars have
interpreted to be septicemic plague.
- I Promessi Sposi
(The Betrothed) (1842) by
Alessandro Manzoni set in early
17th century in Northern Italy, is one of the most read and better
known classical novels in Italian literature. Contains a detailed
and vivid account of society during the plague outbreak in its
time.
- Narcissus and
Goldmund by Hermann Hesse
(1930). A fictional account in which the main character ends up
witnessing the effects of the plague first-hand.
- The
Plague by Albert Camus (1947)
depicts an outbreak of plague at the Algerian city of Oran
.
The disease serves as a means for the author to examine his
characters' responses to hardship, suffering and death.
- Panic in the
Streets (1950) by Elia Kazan. A
murder victim is found to be infected with pneumonic plague. To
prevent a catastrophic epidemic, the police must find and inoculate
the killers and their associates.
- The Reaper
(1976) by Blue Öyster Cult.
The line "40,000 men and women everyday... Like Romeo and Juliet -
40,000 men and women everyday... Redefine happiness - Another
40,000 coming everyday... We can be like they are" is a reference
to the number of people dying daily during The Black Plague"
- The Plague Dogs (1977),
by Richard Adams. A fictional
story in which two dogs, Rowf and Snitter, escape from a British
government research laboratory and are hunted down by the
government as potential carriers of the plague.
- Doomsday Book by
Connie Willis (1992). A Hugo award and Nebula
award-winning historical science
fiction novel, in which a time-traveler inadvertently ends up
in the plague-ridden England
of 1348.
- King of Shadows (1999),
by Susan Cooper. Nathan Field, an
actor, is infected with the bubonic plague while staying in London,
which sends him back in time to the Elizabethan ages.
- Confessions of an Ugly
Stepsister (1999), a novel by Gregory Maguire, takes place in 17th Century
Haarlem,
Netherlands
, where a resurgence of the plague
occurred.
- Year of
Wonders by Geraldine
Brooks (2001), a fictional story of an historical event in
which the small Derbyshire
village of Eyam
quarantines themselves once infected with the plague.
- The Years of Rice and
Salt by Kim Stanley
Robinson (2002). Presents an alternate history of the world
where the population of Europe is obliterated by the Black
Death setting the stage for a world without Europeans and
Christianity.
- In Dies the Fire by
S. M.
Stirling in (2004), an epidemic of
the Black Death is described around the city of Portland,
Oregon.
- Episode 18 of the
second season of American television show House features the bubonic
plague.
- In
the season one episode of Torchwood, "End of Days", a woman from the 14th
century infected by the plague falls through the rift into Cardiff
, causing an infection of dozens of people in a
local hospital.
- Third Watch In the third
episode of the fifth season, a number of illegal immigrants are
discovered in the back of a truck and brought to hospital where
they are diagnosed with the plague. The situation is complicated by
the fact one of the immigrants managed to flee.
- In The Keys to the
Kingdom by Garth Nix, Suzy Turquoise Blue, one of the Piper's children, was led to the House by
the Piper from London during the Great Plague of London.
- Grey's Anatomy In the
first episode of the third season, a couple comes into the hospital
because of flu symptoms, but get in a car crash along the way
because the woman passed out while driving. Different rooms in the
hospital are quarantined, and the woman in the crash dies after
surgery, due to complications from the plague.
- In Grand Theft
Auto, Liberty
City is said to be affected by Bubonic plague.
- The band Modest Mouse
references "the rats and the fleas" that caused the disease to
spread to humans in their song March
into the Sea.
- An episode of the TV show Wire
in the Blood features a strain of bubonic plague as a
biological weapon.
- In Spooks Series 6 (episodes one
and two) a fictional virus that causes symptoms mimicking pneumonic
plague is accidentally released in London.
- Lux perpetua (2006) by
Andrzej Sapkowski. One of the main
characters is murdered by magically induced septicemic plague.
- World Without
End (2007) by Ken Follett. The
plague's spread throughout Europe in the 14th century is an
integral part of the book's storyline.
- The Shifting Tide
(2004) by Anne Perry. The plague enters
England via a ship transporting ivory.
- In an episode of the TV show NCIS, SWAK,
a team member gets infected with an engineered variant of pneumonic plague after opening a contaminated
envelope.
- In the television series The Marvelous
Misadventures of Flapjack, the Plague makes people's faces
hideously swelled and deformed. The only person it does not affect
is Flapjack, whose blood is needed to make a cure. Bubbie does not
get the Plague either, all though it is unknown if she is immune or
not.
- The
Return of the Black Death, an album by the Christian Black Metal band Antestor, deals with the second outbreak of the
Plague epidemic in Norway
and the
country's subsequent Christianization.
- In Dilbert the television series,
episode 6, "Trip to Elbonia", the travel brochure to Elbonia states
that the leading cause of death in Elbonia was no longer "black
plague, but...self inflicted gunshot wounds?" It was passed off as
a typo, and remains unverified.
- Company of Liars, a plague
novel by Karen Maitland.
References
Notes
- Ryan KJ, Ray CG (editors), "Sherris Medical Microbiology - An
Introduction to Infectious Diseases", McGraw-Hill, 4th edition,
2004.
- Haffkine, W. M. 1897. Remarks on the plague prophylactic fluid.
Br. Med. J. 1:1461
- Plague of Athens
- Simpson, W.J.
- Patrick, A.
- The History of the Bubonic Plague
- Scientists Identify Genes Critical to Transmission
of Bubonic Plague
- An Empire's Epidemic
- Justinian's Flea
- The Great Arab Conquests
- Historical Estimates of World Population, U.S. Census
Bureau
- The
Shifting Explanations for the Black Death, the Most Devastating
Plague in Human History
-
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/handle/1794/7694/Bailey_Kevin_thesis2007.pdf?sequence=1
- Daniel Barenblatt, A plague upon Humanity,
HarperCollns, 2004, pp.220-221
- 2002 - Plague in India. WHO
- Madagascar: eighteen dead from Bubonic Plague, five in
hospital since 1 January 2008
- Cummings Study Guide for "The Masque of the Red
Death"
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External links