yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Plague 101 | National Geographic


3m read
·Nov 11, 2024

  • [Narrator] Plague is notorious for causing mass sickness and devastation. But as much tragedy as the disease has caused, it also helped drive crucial scientific and social progress. Plague is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. It mainly affects rodents and spreads by way of insects. Because of these insect carriers, plague has been passed onto humans with devastating consequences.

Three major plague pandemics have occurred in human history. And while they occurred centuries apart, they shared similar traits that paved the way for the spread of disease. One cause of plague pandemics was the rise of international trade. Trade routes connected once-isolated communities and created large economic networks. But by facilitating the movement of goods between communities, trade routes also facilitated the movement of germs.

International trade was an impetus for the first plague pandemic on record, the Plague of Justinian. In the sixth century, outbreaks began in Egypt and, thanks to land and sea trade routes, they spread throughout the Byzantine Empire. Named after the emperor at the time, the Plague of Justinian is estimated to have wiped out about half of Europe's population. Growing economies also made way for urbanization and a rising urban population. This resulted in crowded neighborhoods and the accumulation of waste, which created unsanitary living conditions.

Cities and their residents essentially became incubators for germs and diseases. This was particularly evident in the second and most infamous plague pandemic. In the 14th century, Europe was experiencing an economic and population boom, especially in cities. Proper waste management did not exist at the time, making cities vulnerable to disease. After trade routes brought plague from Asia, where it killed millions in China and the Middle East, the disease wiped out about a third of Europe's population, earning itself the moniker the Black Death.

What also aided in the transmission of the disease was the lack of medical knowledge. For most of human history, the cause of illnesses, germs, was unknown, making sicknesses like the plague a mystery. This lack of knowledge drove the spread of disease as recently as the 19th century. Outbreaks in northwest India eventually reached major port cities in China. In just over a century, plague was exported throughout the globe and caused outbreaks in every continent except Antarctica, making it the most widespread pandemic in history.

This plague pandemic, however, was the last. In 1894, scientists discovered the bacteria behind the plague outbreaks. Their discovery helped further developments in microbiology, medicine, urban planning, and sanitation methods, which led to the treatment and prevention of the disease. Economic expansion, urbanization, and a lack of medical knowledge contributed to the disastrous spread of plague. In turn, however, the disease helped catapult crucial advancements in science and public health, very well making plague pandemics a thing of the past.

More Articles

View All
Meditation | The Powerful Effects Of Cleaning
Krishnamurthy said that you cannot reach a meditative state when your living environment is not in perfect order. This is debatable, of course, especially if you read the stoic work Meditations, in which Marcus Aurelius states that we can take refuge in o…
Your Subconscious Mind is Ridiculously Powerful
Paulo, one of the main hosts of the World Cup, was anything but festive. Entire parts of the city remained shut, as cars were stuck on stretches of tarmac as far as the eye could see. The effects soon extended well beyond the city, as the entire country o…
Fixed Points
Hey, Vsauce! Michael here. There is an art museum on the moon. Supposedly. We can’t be sure until we go back and check. But as the story goes, in 1969, Fred Wall Tower from Bell Laboratories and sculptor Forrest Myers convinced an engineer working on the…
Seth Klarman's Warning for "The Everything Bubble"
The first thing is, we’ve been in an everything bubble. I think that a lot of money has flowed into virtually everything. You’ve had speculation during that bubble in all kinds of things from crypto to meme stocks to SPACs. That day is Seth Klam, and he …
Reading more than one source on a topic | Reading | Khan Academy
Hello readers! Today I want to talk to you about why we read more than one text on one topic, and to show you why I shall use a subject that is very near and dear to my heart: animals that can kill you. This is not a joke; I legitimately wrote a book abou…
Daily Eccentric Habits of Kevin O’Leary
[Music] Everybody asking all the time, how do you keep everything moving forward when you’re traveling all over the place? This is a good example. I’m out in California here at the Sony lot, shooting season 11 of Shark Tank. Now, this is pretty industrio…