April 2011 File Greatplague of london 1665.jpg thumb Collecting the dead for burial during the GreatPlague The GreatPlague 1665 1666 was the last major epidemic of the bubonic plague to occur in the Kingdom ... historical 20outline great plague.htm The GreatPlague of 1665 ref In 1603, the plague killed 30,000 Londoners. ref http www.historylearningsite.co.uk londonplague 1665.htm London and the GreatPlague ... until September 1666. On 2 and 3 September, the Great Fire of London destroyed much of the centre of London. At about the same time, the plague outbreak tapered off. However, it is now thought that the Plague had died off before the Great Fire of London. Also, the majority of plague cases were found ... , http www.jamesleasor.com the plague and the fire true The Plague and the Fire London 1961, 2011. ISBN 978 1 908291 22 6 Bell, Walter George. The GreatPlague in London in 1665 . London John Lane, The Bodley ... Defoe http www.1911encyclopedia.org Plague The GreatPlague of LondonPlague Encyclopaedia Britannica ... Distinct Clones of Yersinia pestis Caused the Black Death ref The GreatPlague killed an estimated ... The LondonPlague 1665 ref Bubonic plague is a disease caused by the Yersinia pestis bacterium which ... it was only remembered afterwards as the greatplague because it was the last widespread outbreak ... of mortality for the plague in 1665. The GreatPlague of 1665 was the last major outbreak of the plague ... April 1665. Another suspected source of the plague was cats and dogs, of which the Lord Mayor of London at the time had the majority exterminated. By July 1665, plague was in the city of London itself ... London. While Pepys provides an account of the Plague through his diary, Henry Foe s nephew Daniel ... GreatPlague of Vienna of 1679 Derby plague of 1665 Eyam Plague The Musical , a musical loosely based on the 1665 plague Beak doctor costume Plague doctor contract References reflist Necropolis. London ... Plague of London th zh ... more details
also GreatPlague of LondonGreatPlague of Vienna Bubonic Plague Category Epidemics Category Seville ...The GreatPlague of Seville 1647 1652 was a massive outbreak of disease in Spain that killed up to a quarter of Seville s population. Unlike the plague of 1596 1602 which claimed 600,000 to 700,000 lives, or a little under 8 of the population, and initially struck northern and central Spain and Andalus a in the south, the GreatPlague, which may have arisen in Algeria, struck the Mediterranean side of Spain first. The coastal city of Valencia, Spain Valencia was the first city to be hit, losing an estimated 30,000 people. The disease chewed through Andaluc a in addition to sweeping the north into Catalonia and Aragon. The coast of M laga lost upwards of 50,000 people. In Seville quarantine measures were evaded, ignored, unproposed and or unenforced. Unsurprisingly the result was horrific. The city of Seville and its rural districts were thought to have lost 150,000 people&mdash starting with a total .... Three great plagues ravaged Spain in the 17th century. They were The Plague of 1596 1602 Arrived .... The Plague of 1646 1652 The GreatPlague of Seville believed to have arrived by ship from Algeria, it was spread ... and children. This was the greatest, but not the only, plague of 17th century Spain. Not quite twenty five years later Spain found itself once again in the grips of a furious plague. For nine years 1676 1685 , ebbing and flowing like a great wave, it ravaged all Spain. It struck with especial virulence ... conditions which weakened the exhausted population still further. This last plague of the 17th century ... coast as far north as Barcelona. The Plague of 1676 1685 Factoring in normal births, deaths, plus ... plague , an infection by the bacterium Yersinia pestis , transmitted via a rat Vector epidemiology vector . Other symptom patterns of the bubonic plague, such as septicemic plague and pneumonic plague were also present. References reflist Pakhare, Jayashree. Black Death the Black Plague. Buzzle.Com. ... more details
Image Plague hospital in Vienna 1679.jpg thumb 300px A plague hospital in Vienna 1679. Contemporary engraving. The GreatPlague of Vienna occurred in 1679 in Vienna , Austria , the imperial residence of the Austrian ... from the GreatPlague and later waves of the disease, the Viennese erected monuments such as the famous Baroque Karlskirche with the associated 69 foot plague column s known as the Pests ule Vienna Pests ule . Regional outbreak What has become known as the GreatPlague of Vienna , was actually ... raging in Western Europe for many years, traveling Eastern Europe East by trade route s. The GreatPlague of London of 1665 1666, which is believed to have originated from the Netherlands in the 1650s ... German cities suffered during these years but, by 1683, the plague disappeared from Germany until the epidemic of 1707. Lieber Augustin The greatplague of 1679 gave rise to the legend of Lieber Augustin ... bubonic plague , which is caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis , carried by fleas associated with the black ... from episodic plague outbreaks since the first wave of Black Death in the fourteenth century. The city ..., even for the time, that the plague often carried the title Viennese death in other parts of Europe ... ointments. The corpses of plague victims were carted to the outer edges of the city and placed in large ... a severe plague raged in Cologne and on the Rhine , which was prolonged until 1670 in the district. In the Netherlands there was plague in 1667 1669, but there are no definite notices of it after 1672. France saw its last plague epidemic in 1668. In the years 1675 1684 a new plague wave originated ... persons in 1675. The plague of Vienna in 1679 was very severe, causing at least 76,000 deaths. Other ... lost 83,000 due to plague. Dresden was affected in 1680, Magdeburg and Halle, Saxony Anhalt Halle ..., fell into a pit with bodies of plague victims, late at night when he was drunk. Augustin did not contract ..., 1965. Gregg, Charles T. Plague An Ancient Disease in the Twentieth Century . Albuquerque University ... more details
The GreatPlague of 1738 was an outbreak of the bubonic plague between 1738 1740 that affected areas in the modern nations of Romania , Hungary , Ukraine , Serbia , Croatia , and Austria . Although no exact figure is available, the epidemic likely killed over 50,000 people. In February 1738 the plague hit the Banat region, having been spread there by the Imperial Army. ref http www.genealogy.ro cont 20c.htm history XVIII Bot generated title ref According to the 1740 Hungarian Diet, the GreatPlague claimed 36,000 lives. ref name Demographic Changes http mek.oszk.hu 03400 03407 html 280.html Demographic Changes Bot generated title ref Southeastern Transylvania may have been the hardest area hit. Over the following eight years, the plague killed a sixth of the population of Timi oara . Bucharest s Monument of the Holy Trinity in Pia a Unirii Unirii Square is dedicated to the plague s victims. The plague would return to hit the city again in 1762 1763. ref http thekonst.net en propaganda 226 thekonst.net propaganda. weekly notes by konst the cradle of Romanian Revol Bot generated title ref Other cities in the region were also stricken. Between October 1737 and April 1738, 111 deaths were reported in Z rne ti , and 70 in Codlea . ref name Demographic Changes More than 10 of the population of Cluj Napoca was reported to have been killed by the pandemic. ref http www.clujonline.com history history.htm CLUJ NAPOCA, The Treasure City of Transylvania, Romania History Bot generated title ref The disease s spread extended to the Adriatic . It made its way to the island of Bra in modern day Croatia. ref http www.croatians.com sumartin island of brac.htm SUMARTIN Island of Brac Bot generated title ref By the summer, the Serbia n region of Grad Zrenjanin was also affected. ref http www.zrenjanin.org.rs ogradu ogradu eistorija.htm History Bot generated title ref See also Black Death Bubonic Plague References references DEFAULTSORT GreatPlague Of 1738 Category Natural disasters in Romania ... more details
at its pre 1720 level. Outbreak and fatalities This great outburst of plague was the last recurrence of an epidemic of bubonic plague, following the devastating episodes which began in the mid fourteenth ..., Marseille recovered quickly from the plague outbreak. Economic activity took only a few years to recover ... , in 1580 and 1582, and in 1649 1650. ref In 1720, the plague bacillus Yersinia pestis arrived at the port ... Sidon in Lebanon , having previously called at Smyrna , Tripoli , and plague ridden Cyprus . Following the death on board of a Turkish passenger, several crew members fell victim to the plague, including ... merchants needed the silk and cotton cargo of the ship for the great medieval fair at Beaucaire, Gard ... thousands of corpses lay scattered and in piles around the city. Attempts to stop the spread of plague ... between Marseille and the rest of Provence. To enforce this separation, a plague wall, the Mur ... of 90,000 died, and an additional 50,000 people succumbed as the plague spread north, eventually ... strengthened the plague defenses of the port, building the waterside fr Lazaret d Arenc Lazaret ... plague outbreak was conducted by scholars from the Universit de la M diterran e . ref Signoli ... and Historical Demography in the Context of an Epidemic Plague in Provence in the Eighteenth ... d tudes D mographiques year 2002 pages 829 854 en available on JSTOR See also commons Category GreatPlague of Marseille GreatPlague of Marseille List of Bubonic plague outbreaks Plague of Justinian Popular revolt in late medieval Europe Plague Riot Third Pandemic Peasants Revolt Category Eurasian ... more details
The Great Influenza The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague In History is a book by John M. Barry . It examines the 1918 flu pandemic , the worst pandemic in history. Barry not only focuses only on what was occurring in the United States at the time, but attempts to place it both against the background of American history and within the context of the history of medicine. External links http www.amazon.com Great Influenza Deadliest Plague History dp 0670894737 Reviews med book stub DEFAULTSORT Great Influenza Category Books about diseases Category Influenza Category 2004 books ... more details
outbreak of bubonic plague in the GreatPlague of LondonPlague Year of 1665. The relationship ... was evidence of God s wrath on the City of London for the sin of gluttony . The GreatPlague of LondonGreatPlague epidemic of 1665 is believed to have killed a sixth of London s inhabitants ...pp semi protected small yes pp move indef About the 1666 fire of London other Great Fires List of historic fires other notable fires in London Early fires of London and Second Great Fire of London Use British English date August 2011 Use dmy dates date August 2011 Featured article Image Great Fire London.jpg thumb 350px right Detail of the Great Fire of London by an unknown painter, depicting the fire .... The Great Fire of London was a major conflagration that swept through the central parts of the English .... ref Reddaway, 27. ref London in the 1660s Image Great fire of london map.png right thumb 350px ... Pepys , observing the conflagration from the Tower of London, recorded great concern for friends living ... civil war revolution great fire 02.shtml London s Burning The Great Fire ref The 18 foot 5.5  ... british civil war revolution great fire 02.shtml London s Burning The Great Fire . ref flying embers ... Bell 1929 The Story of London s Great Fire 109 11. John Lane London. ref A contemporary account said ... wrote Evelyn. Image The Great Fire of London, with Ludgate and Old St. Paul s.JPG right 250px ... plan for the rebuilding of London Image John Evelyn s plan rebuilding LondonGreat Fire 1666.png ... of London to commemorate the Great Fire of London, designed by Sir Christopher Wren An example of the urge ... later in his reign. ref cite encyclopaedia last Porter first Stephen title The great fire of London ... in the Netherlands the Great Fire of London was seen as a divine retribution for Holmes s Bonfire ... initiative, a Monument to the Great Fire of London , designed by Christopher Wren and Robert Hooke ... Katharine Docks Tower Wharf . The Tower of London is on the right and London Bridge on the left, with Old ... more details
DEFAULTSORT Second Great Fire of London Category Battles and operations of World War II Category United Kingdom home front during World War II Category Fires in London Category 1940 in England Category 1940 in London Category Firebombing London Category 1940 fires Category History of the City of London ... saved by the dedication of the London firemen who kept the fire away from the Cathedral and the volunteer ... and all of Paternoster Row . Paternoster Row was the centre of the London publishing trade and an estimated ... 11 12 london blitz 29th december 1940 title London Blitz 29th December 1940 ref Image Daily Mail ... of 29 December 1940 Faber, 2005 Harcourt, 2006 Cyril Demarne The London Blitz, A Fireman s Story ... more details
Infobox religious building building name Great Synagogue of London image GreatSyngogue.jpg image size caption The Great Synagogue in 1809 from Rudolf Ackermann Ackerman s Microcosm of London location London , England religious affiliation Judaism rite Ashkenazi architect James Spiller specifications no functional status Destroyed The Great Synagogue of London was, for centuries, the centre of Ashkenazi synagogue and Jewish life in London . It was destroyed during World War II , in the Blitz . History The earliest Ashkenazi synagogue constructed in London after the return of Jews to England in the 17th century was built about 1690 at Duke s Place, north of Aldgate . The congregation grew, and in 1722 a new building was erected with the cost being born by businessman and philanthropist, Moses Hart 1675 1756 Moses Hart . An enlarged building, designed by George Dance the Elder , was consecrated in 1766. Between 1788 and 1790, the third synagogue was built on the site. This building would stand ... Kingdom George III , visited the Great Synagogue of London in 1809. There were seated on elegant ... The Great Synagogue London 1690 1940 last Roth first Cecil authorlink Cecil Roth year 1950 location London postscript available in an online version http www.jewishgen.org jcr uk Susser roth index.htm ... External links http www.jewishgen.org JCR UK London city gsduke index.htm The Great Synagogue on http ... 1996 pp. 415ff. Kadish 1996 , Chapter 4, by Clarence Epstein, The Architecture of the Great Synagogue .... ref Wischnitzer, p. 169. ref The synagogue was destroyed in the The Blitz London Blitz on May 10, 1941 .... 1820 The Rabbi s of the Great Synagogue, and their terms of office, included Aaron Hart rabbi Aaron ... Reflist Refbegin Kadish, Sharman Building Jerusalem, Jewish Architecture in Britain , London, Valentine ... 18th century synagogues Category Judaism in London Category Synagogues in London Category Buildings ... in the United Kingdom de Gro e Synagoge von London es Gran Sinagoga de Londres fr Grande synagogue de ... more details
Viewing platform at the top of the Monument. The Monument to the Great Fire of London , more commonly ... of London , near the northern end of London Bridge , which commemorates the Great Fire of London . It stands ... paperback References reflist External links commons category The Monument to the Great Fire of London ... Great Fire of London cs Pam tn k Velk ho po ru Lond na de Monument London es Monumento al Gran Incendio ... ft 62 m from the place where the Great Fire started on 2 September 1666. Another monument, the Golden Boy of Pye Corner , marks the point near Smithfield, London Smithfield where the fire stopped. Constructed ... www.cityoflondon.gov.uk publisher City of London ref and was built on the site of St Margaret, New Fish Street St. Margaret s, Fish Street , the first church to be burnt down by the Great Fire. The Monument ... the site in Pudding Lane of the shop of Thomas Farynor, the king s baker, where the Great Fire began ... that it is Where London s column, pointing at the skies, Like a tall bully, lifts the head ... restoration. The nearest List of London Underground stations London Underground station is Bank Monument ... that London rises again...three short years complete that which was considered the work of ages ... wielding female to represent a triumphant London the cost of either being estimated at 1,050 ... in London. Halfway up, he suffered a panic attack , but persevered and made it to the top, where he found it horrid to be so monstrous a way up in the air, so far above London and all its spires ... Scene Challenge The Monument.htm City of London Street Scene Challenge The Monument ref ref http ... City of London Proposals and Priorities ref The Monument closed in July 2007 for an 18 month, 4.5 ... publisher City of London ref As a scientific instrument File The Monument, London Staircase.jpg ... of weather, building and ground activity in the City. wide image London panorama top monument.jpg 1200px center Panorama of London taken from the top of the Monument center In fiction Charles ... more details
The GreatLondon Mystery is a 1920 Cinema of the United Kingdom British silent film silent crime film directed by Charles Raymond and starring David Devant , Robert Clifton actor Robert Clifton and Charles Raymond. ref http ftvdb.bfi.org.uk sift title 224143 ref An Englismen robs a sacred jewel from a temple and is haunted by its curse. Cast David Devant ... The Master Magician Robert Clifton actor Robert Clifton ... Bob Sefton Charles Raymond ... Ching Fu Lady Doris Stapleton ... Audrey Malvern Kenneth Duffy ... Edward Selwyn Martin Valmour ... Webb Lester Gard ... The Man Monkey Sadie Bennett ... Curley Lola De Liane ... Froggie the vampire References references External links imdb title 0011243 DEFAULTSORT GreatLondon Mystery, The Category 1920 films Category British films Category 1920s crime films Category English language films Category Films directed by Charles Raymond 1920s UK film stub ... more details
Blood incident , a virtual plague that occurred in the video game World of Warcraft GreatPlague ...wiktionary plague plagues Plague or The Plague may refer to tocright Medicine Plague disease , a specific disease caused by Yersinia pestis . There are three major manifestations Bubonic plague Septicemic plague Pneumonic plague An epidemic of infectious disease A pandemic caused by such a disease Art and literature Plague B cklin Plague B cklin , a painting by Arnold B cklin Plague , a 2000 novel by Malcolm Rose Plague 99 , a 1989 novel by Jean Ure The Plague , a 1947 novel by Albert Camus The Plague Dragon Prince The Plague Dragon Prince , an epidemic in Melanie Rawn s fantasy novel Dragon Prince The Plague magazine The Plague magazine , New York University s comedy magazine Film and television Plague 1978 film Plague 1978 film , a science fiction genre film depicting a genetic engineering accident The Plague film The Plague film , a 2006 horror film The Plague Diagnosis Murder Episode The Plague Diagnosis Murder Episode , a 1994 episode of Diagnosis Murder The Plague , second episode of the 1966 Doctor Who serial The Ark Doctor Who Production The Ark The Plague Father Ted The Plague Father Ted , a 1996 episode of Father Ted Plague Dead Zone Plague Dead Zone , a 2003 episode of Dead Zone Plague Deadwood episode Plague Deadwood episode , a 2004 episode of Deadwood Music The Plague American band , a hardcore punk band from Cleveland The Plague English band , an English punk rock band The Plague New Zealand band Plague The Musical , a 2008 musical by David Massingham and Matthew Townend Plagues album Plagues album , a 2007 album by The Devil Wears Prada The Plague , a 1983 album by Demon band Demon The Plague Brotha Lynch Hung album The Plague Brotha Lynch Hung album , 2002 The Plague EP The Plague EP , a 1987 EP by Nuclear Assault The Plague EP , a 2005 EP by I Hate Sally Plague Klinik album Plague Klinik album , a 1987 album by Klinik The Plague song The Plague song , a song ... more details
About the novel by Albert Camus Plague disambiguation infobox Book See Wikipedia WikiProject Novels or Wikipedia WikiProject Books name The Plague title orig La Peste translator image Image ThePlague.jpg ... 1947 english pub date 1948 media type Hardback and paperback pages isbn N A The Plague Fr. La Peste ... in their labour as the Algerian city of Oran is swept by a plague. It asks a number of questions ... from doctors to vacationers to fugitives, all help to show the effects the plague has on a populace ... for Disease Control and Prevention , Oran was decimated by the plague in 1556 and 1678, but outbreaks ... from the scale of the epidemic described in the novel. The Plague is considered an existentialist classic ... of life is inevitable, and he further illustrates the human reaction towards the absurd . The Plague ... Camus himself helped to define. Plot summary The text of The Plague is divided into five parts. Part ... that the collection itself was the catalyst for the spread of the bubonic plague . The main character ... the illness until they come to the conclusion that a plague is sweeping the town. They both approach ... supervised. A supply of plague serum finally arrives, but there is only enough to treat existing ..., the town is sealed and an outbreak of plague is officially declared. Part two The town is sealed ... the spirit of the townspeople, who begin to feel isolated and introverted, and the plague begins ... so that they may smuggle him out of the city. Another character, Father Paneloux, uses the plague as an opportunity to advance his stature in the town by suggesting that the plague was an act of God .... Part four In September and October, the town remains at the mercy of the plague. Rieux hears from the sanatorium that the condition of his wife is worsening. He also hardens his heart regarding the plague ... during the plague, because it gives him a sense of being connected to others, since everybody faces ... Orfeo ed Euridice Orpheus and Eurydice , but the actor portraying Orpheus collapses with plague symptoms ... more details
Information Description Great Seal of the London Necropolis and National Mausoleum Company Source File LNC logo.jpg Date 1852 Author Unknown Permission PD UK unknown PD 1923 other versions ... more details
Infobox album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Live in London Type live Artist Great White band Great White Cover LondonGW.JPG Released 1990 Recorded Wembley Stadium , London , UK, 11 December 1989 Genre Hard rock Length 37 47 Label Capitol Records Capitol EMI EMI Japan Producer Alan Niven, Michael Lardie Reviews Last album ...Twice Shy br 1989 This album Live in London br 1990 Next album Hooked Great White album Hooked br 1991 Live in London is a Japan only live album released by the United States American hard rock band Great White band Great White in 1990. The album was recorded live at Wembley Stadium in London, UK. Track listing Move It 5 57 Heart the Hunter 5 23 On Your Knees 4 06 House of Broken Love 6 12 Face the Day 5 24 All Over Now 5 02 Once Bitten, Twice Shy 5 43 Band members Jack Russell musician Jack Russell vocals Mark Kendall guitarist Mark Kendall lead guitar Michael Lardie guitar, keyboards Tony Montana bass Audie Desbrow drums Great White DEFAULTSORT Live In LondonGreat White Album Category Great White live albums Category 1990 live albums Category Capitol Records live albums Category Live albums recorded at Wembley Stadium 1990s hard rock album stub ... more details
The Great Northern and London and North Western Joint Railway was a joint railway owned by the Great Northern Railway Great Britain Great Northern Railway GNR and the London and North Western Railway LNWR ... railway station Grantham or west towards Nottingham London Road Low Level railway station Nottingham . Connecting Lines Great Northern and London and North Western Joint Railway RDT In connection ... reflist DEFAULTSORT Great Northern And London And North Western Joint Railway Category British ... split. One branch ran north west and joined the Great Northern Railway Great Britain GNR Ambergate ... for access to Nottingham London Road Low Level railway station Nottingham . The other line ran ... Longville junction on the LNWR line and Fletton junction on the Great Northern Railway Great Britain ... on 15 December . The initial services were Northampton railway station Northampton to Nottingham London ... station Newark . On 1 January 1883, the Great Northern Railway Great Britain GNR opened their line ... . 1900s In 1900, the Great Central Railway opened Nottingham Victoria railway station Victoria station in Nottingham. The Great Northern Railway Great Britain GNR built a connecting line and diverted ... their trains at Nottingham London Road Low Level railway station London Road station , now renamed Nottingham London Road Low Level railway station London Road Low Level to distinguish it from Nottingham London Road High Level railway station London Road High Level on the new connecting line to Nottingham ... was not remedied until 1944 when these services were at last diverted to Victoria by the London ... railway station Northampton to Nottingham London Road Low Level railway station Nottingham ... Newark which interconnected with a Northampton railway station Northampton to Nottingham London Road ... railway station Northampton to Nottingham London Road Low Level railway station Nottingham ... to Grantham railway station Grantham route, operated by the Great Northern Railway Great Britain ... more details
Yard close to London Bridge ref Monument to the Great Fire of London The Monument stands on the site of this church ref St Magnus the Martyr St Magnus, London Bridge St Martin Pomary East side of Ironmonger ... rebuilt after the Great Fire but since demolished Great Fire of London List of Christopher Wren Churches in London Bibliography Citation last Betjeman first John author link John Betjeman last2 first2 author2 link publication date date year 1967 reprint 1992 title Sovereign City of London Churches ... Street St Swithin, London Stone St Swithin s, Cannon Street ref 1940, slight bomb damage deconsecrated ... Mary Staining Oat Lane Church of St Alban, Wood Street, London Church of St Alban, Wood Street St Mary ... Lane ref Between King William Street London King William Street and Lombard Street, London Lombard St ref St Edmund the King and Martyr ref Now the London Centre for Spirituality ref St Nicholas Olave ... Street Church of St Alban, Wood Street, London ibid St Pancras, Soper Lane Corner of Pancras Lane and Queen ... 1996 title Vanished Churches of the City of London edition volume publication place London place ... of the City of London edition volume publication place London place publisher The Bodley Head Limited id isbn doi oclc url accessdate Category Churches destroyed in the Great Fire of London and not rebuilt Category London related lists Churches Category Lists of former buildings and structures Churches ... more details
of St. Bride on Fleet Street during the London 1665 plague, shows typical methods employed by the parishes ... number, with 2,111 deaths overall and 1,427 attributed to plague. ref cite web url http www.history.ac.uk cmh epiharding.html title Burial of the plague dead in early modern London publisher ...Refimprove date January 2008 A plague pit is the informal term used to refer to mass grave s in which victims of the Black Death were buried. The term is most often used to describe pits located in Great Britain , but can be applied to any place where Bubonic plague victims were buried. Origin The plague which swept across Europe in the 14th century is estimated to have killed between one third and two thirds of Medieval demography Europe s population . ref name barry St phane Barry and Norbert Gualde, The Greatest Epidemic of History La plus grande pid mie de l histoire , in L Histoire n 310, June 2006, pp.45 46, say between one third and two thirds Robert Gottfried 1983 . Black Death in Dictionary of the Middle Ages , volume 2, pp.257 67, says between 25 and 45 percent . ref ref cite web url http history.boisestate.edu westciv plague 15.shtml title Population Loss publisher History.boisestate.edu date accessdate 2011 10 27 ref ref cite web url http www3.iath.virginia.edu osheim plaguein.html title Plague and Public Health in Renaissance Europe publisher .iath.virginia.edu date 1994 10 28 accessdate 2011 10 27 ref Disposal of the bodies of those who died presented huge problems for the authorities, and eventually the normal patterns of burial and funerary observance broke down. Major plague outbreaks Plague pits were used especially often during major plague outbreaks, such as the GreatPlague of LondonLondon epidemic of 1665 . During these times, graveyards rapidly filled ... been found in plague pits, where other diseases, such as anthrax , have been discovered. References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Plague Pit Category Epidemiology Category Cemeteries Category Early Modern ... more details
announcement on Plague website , 1st October 2009 ref It was again performed at C venues with London previews at Upstairs at The Gatehouse . Synopsis It is 1665 and Clive Hucklefish has come to London to start a career as an actor on the London stage. Mugged and left for dead within minutes of arrival ...Orphan date November 2011 Infobox musical name Plague The Musical image Plague musical poster.jpg alt Plague The Musical 2010 poster image size 200px caption 2010 Production Poster music David Massingham ... br Plague The Musical is a musical with book, music and lyrics by David Massingham and Matthew Townend. It is a dark comedy based loosely on the events of the GreatPlague of London in 1665 1666. Plague premiered in 2008 at The Questors Theatre in Ealing, London ref http www.questors.org.uk event.aspx?id 109 Plague The Musical Questors Theatre Listing , July 2008 ref before transferring to C venues ... Event Information Plague The Musical ref where it was named a 2008 sell out show. A new production ... his training, Clive befriends Milly, the buxom barmaid of the local pub, and also the beggars of London ... he can t refuse. He is led deep into the London sewers to meet the mysterious Rat King, a visionary patriarch who begs Clive to uncover the bones of a great martyr to rat kind Elman Squatcherd ... victim of the Black Death and the Rat King actually uses the remains to infect London with the deadly bubonic plague His henchmen also steal the Elixir of life to ensure that salvation is impossible. The Londoners ... Death and informed that he must end the plague or face the consequences. Clive soon realises that the rats ... to learn that she has caught the plague and there are but a few precious moments before she passes ... spread throughout the water system and that the plague has, against all odds, been cured. As a reward for his endeavour, she agrees to grant Isabella a reprieve. All London celebrates the end of the disaster ... Rat King who has the last laugh, however, for he has just begun the next London wide ... more details
Star Bulletin s Feature on the Great Chinatown Fire . Plague finally reached the United States ... Oct., 2010 that all three of the great waves of plague originated from China. http www.nytimes.com ...About the disease caused by Yersinia pestis other uses Plague disambiguation Infobox disease Name Plague ... plague. ICD10 ICD10 A 20 a 20 ICD9 ICD9 020 ICDO OMIM MedlinePlus 000596 eMedicineSubj med eMedicineTopic 3381 MeshID D010930 Plague is a deadly infectious disease that is caused by the Enterobacteriaceae .... Until June 2007, plague was one of only three diseases specifically reportable to the World Health ... no 2 en.pdf ref Depending on lung infection, or sanitary conditions, plague also can be spread in the air, by direct contact, or by contaminated undercooked food or materials. The symptoms of plague depend on the concentrated areas of infection in each person such as bubonic plague in lymph nodes, septicemic plague in blood vessels, pneumonic plague in lungs, and so on. It is treatable if detected early. Plague is still Endemic epidemiology endemic in some parts of the world. Name The epidemiological use of the term plague is currently applied to bacterial infections that cause bubo es , 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 etymology of the word plague is believed to come from the Latin word pl ga blow, wound and plangere ... plague in most plague epidemic s in Asia, Africa, and South America. Both male and female ... means. ref name PM Plague Manual Epidemiology, Distribution, Surveillance and Control , p. 9 & 11. WHO .... The natural foci of plague are situated in a broad belt in the tropical and sub tropical latitudes ... the spread of the Bubonic plague. It is mainly a disease in the flea s Xenopsylla cheopis that infested ... more details
plague germ, carried out from samples taken from skeletal remains in London by researchers from the University of T bingen, suggest that the Justinian Plague and others from antiquity arose from ... of the Plague of Justinian was hand necrosis The Plague of Justinian was a pandemic that afflicted ... cause of the pandemic is bubonic plague , which later became infamous for either causing or contributing ... plague, as historians call it, is thought to have killed perhaps half the population of Europe ... century pandemic, or from pathogens entirely unrelated to bubonic plague. ref cite web last ... about 750, the plague returned with each generation throughout the Mediterranean basin. The wave ... historians named this plague incident after the Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian I , who was in power ... other first hand reports of the plague s ravages, by the Syriac church historian John of Ephesus and the church ... War II.22 23. ref recorded that, at its peak, the plague was killing 10,000 people in Constantinople .... ref Procopius, Anekdota , 23.20f. ref blockquote As a result of plague in the countryside, the price ... significant funds to the construction of great churches, like Hagia Sophia . As the empire coped with these expenditures, the plague s effects on tax revenue were disastrous, although Justinian ... in their conflict with Constantinople. The plague weakened the Byzantine Empire at a critical ... under a single emperor for the first time since the year 395. The plague may also have contributed ... ref Rosen, William. http www.justiniansflea.com events.htm Justinian s Flea Plague, Empire, and the Birth .... The troops, overextended, could not hold on. When the plague subsided, they retook Italy , but could ... some suggestion that the plague facilitated the Anglo Saxon conquest of Britain, since its aftermath ... contained. British sources from this period report plague, but Saxon ones are silent. The Romano British ... patterns being more dispersive than English ones, which could have served to facilitate plague ... more details
local outbreaks of lesser severity. The GreatPlague of Seville 1647 , the GreatPlague of London 1665 1666 , the GreatPlague of Vienna 1679 , and the GreatPlague of Marseille 1720 , were ... Death, a bubonic plague of great dimensions part 2. Word Focus. http wordfocus.com word black ...About the disease in general information about the medieval European plague Black Death Refimprove date April 2011 Infobox disease Name Bubonic plague Image Plague buboes.jpg Caption An inguinal bubo on the upper thigh of person infected with bubonic plague. Swollen lymph glands buboes often occur in the neck, armpit and groin inguinal regions of plague victims ICD10 ICD10 A 20 0 a 00 ICD9 ICD9 020.0 DiseasesDB 14226 MedlinePlus eMedici neSubj eMedicineTopic MeshName MeshNumber D010930 Bubonic plague ... http allcountries.org health plague.html title Plague, Overview work Health Topics A to Z accessdate ... plague kills about two out of three infected humans within 4 days. The term bubonic plague ... occur in the armpit and groin in persons suffering from bubonic plague. Bubonic plague was often used synonymously for plague, but it does in fact refer specifically to an infection that enters through the skin and travels through the lymphatics , as is often seen in flea borne infections. Bubonic plague along with the septicemic plague and the pneumonic plague , which are the two other manifestations .... These findings suggest that plague was imported to Europe on two or more occasions, each following ... the plague killed so many of the working population, wages rose and some historians have seen this as a turning ... and residual Ecchymosis ecchymoses over both forearms in a patient recovering from bubonic plague that disseminated ... from Textbook of Military Medicine . The most infamous symptom of bubonic plague is an infection ... lymph node where they begin to replicate. Buboes associated with the bubonic plague are commonly ... is the origin of the term Black Death , the bubonic plague pandemic that swept Europe in the mid ... more details
to it are scattered among his voluminous writings. He describes the plague as great and of long ...The Antonine Plague , AD 165 180, also known as the Plague of Galen , who described it, was an ancient pandemic , either of smallpox ref H. Haeser s conclusion, in Lehrbuch der Geschichte der Medicin und der epidemischen Krankenheiten III 24 33 1882 , followed by Zinsser 1996. ref or measles , ref There is not enough evidence satisfactorily to identify the disease or diseases concluded J. F. Gilliam in his summary 1961 of the written sources, with inconclusive Greek and Latin inscriptions, two groups of papyri and coinage. ref brought back to the Roman Empire by troops returning from campaigns in the Near East . The epidemic may have claimed the life of Roman emperor Lucius Verus , who died in 169 and was the co regent of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus , whose family name, Antoninus, was given to the epidemic ..., LXXII 14.3 4 his book that would cover the plague under Marcus Aurelius is missing this later outburst ... and decimated the Roman army. ref http www.loyno.edu history journal 1996 7 Smith.html Plague in the Ancient ... reports that the plague spread to Gaul and the legions along the Rhine . Eutropius historian Eutropius ... William McNeill asserts that the Antonine Plague and the later Plague of Cyprian 251 ca.270 were ... have no doubt that this crisis was brought about by that plague... The ancient world never recovered from the blow inflicted on it by the plague which visited it in the reign of M. Aurelius. ref Niebuhr, Lectures on the history of Rome III, Lecture CXXXI London 1849 , quoted by Gilliam 1961 225 ref Edward Gibbon and Michael Rostovtzeff assign the Antonine plague less influence than political and economic ... many others. Notes Reflist See also Plague of Cyprian References Marcus Aurelius. Meditations IX.2 ... 9. Gilliam, J. F. The Plague under Marcus Aurelius . The American Journal of Philology 82.3 July ... Plague and the Third Century Crisis , in Olivier Hekster, Gerda de Kleijn, Danie lle Slootjes ... more details
the scarlet plague by jack london Unabridged audiobook at LibriVox http books.google.com books?id sMl9MFWKuf0C ...Infobox book See Wikipedia WikiProject Novels or Wikipedia WikiProject Books name The Scarlet Plague title orig translator image File ScarletPlague.jpg 175px image caption 1st edition cover author Jack London cover artist country USA language English language English series genre publisher Macmillan Publishers United States Macmillan release date 1912 in literature 1912 media type Print pages isbn ISBN 9781406823578 Echo Library edition, paperback preceded by followed by The Scarlet Plague is a post apocalyptic fiction novel written by Jack London and originally published in London Magazine in 1912. The story takes place in 2070s 2073 , sixty years after an uncontrollable epidemic, the Red Death, ref Evening Standard Back to the future again 10 November 2008 ref has depopulated the planet. James Howard Smith is one of the few survivors of the pre plague era left alive in the San Francisco area, and as he realizes his time grows short, he tries to impart the value of knowledge and wisdom to his grandsons. World of Scarlet Plague The world of the Scarlet Plague before the epidemic broke out was quite a civilized and advanced one, at least from the vantage point of the year 1912. It is an oligarchy where the upper class thrive and the working class are often treated little better than slaves . The theme is similar to London s The Iron Heel 1908 . References reflist External links Wikisource ... Fiction Century, David G. Hartwell. Discusses Last man on Earth subgenre. DEFAULTSORT Scarlet Plague, The Category 1912 novels Category Novels by Jack London Category Fictional diseases Category American post apocalyptic novels Category Works originally published in The London Magazine Category 2073 Jack London novels fr La Peste carlate gl A praga escarlata it La peste scarlatta pt The Scarlet Plague ru ... more details
Infobox Book name Plague 99 image image caption author Jean Ure country UK publisher Methuen pub date July 1989 pages 160 isbn 0 15 262429 5 congress PZ7.U64 Pl 1991 oclc 23211565 followed by Come Lucky April Plague 99 ISBN 0 15 262429 5 is a 1989 novel written by Jean Ure . It deals with a pandemic that shuts down London and group of three teenagers that survive the outbreak . The book takes an apocalyptic view and details the event of the three principal characters at the end of the year 1999 as the plague wipes out the population of London in the course of a few weeks. It was written during the Cold War and shares many aspects of the fears of the time. The principal characters are Fran, her best friend Harriet, and a schoolmate, Shahid. The book has a sequel set 100 years later called Come Lucky April , which did not receive as much praise as the first by some readers. Awards Plague 99 won the Lancashire Children s Book of the Year award in 1990. Category 1989 novels Category English novels Category Children s science fiction novels Category Novels set in London Category 1999 in fiction child novel stub ... more details