[Disease and Its Causes by William Thomas Councilman]@TWC D-Link book
Disease and Its Causes

CHAPTER VIII
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The actual mortality cannot be known, but has been estimated at fifty millions.

Plague played a large part in the epidemics of the Middle Ages.

An epidemic started in 1346 and had as great an extension as the Justinian plague, destroying a fourth of the inhabitants of the places attacked; and during the fifteenth and sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the disease repeatedly raised its head, producing smaller and greater epidemics, the best known of which, from the wonderful description of De Foe, is that of London in 1665, and called the Black Death.

Little was heard of the disease in the nineteenth century, although its existence in Asia was known.

In 1894 it appeared in Hong Kong, extended to Canton, thence to India, Japan, San Francisco, Mexico, and, in fact, few parts of the tropics or temperate regions of the earth have been free from it.


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