Armies of Pestilence: The Impact of Disease on HistoryJames Clarke & Company Limited, 15. juni 2004 - 276 sider "We have lived in a world that had, until the arrival in 2020 of the coronavirus Covid-19, not suffered a serious pandemic for a century, and society had almost forgotten the enormous impact created by highly infectious diseases. Infectious diseases, however, played major roles in ending the Golden Age of Athens, wrecked Justinian's plans to restore the Roman Empire to its former glory, and killed untold millions in Latin America after the Spanish invasion. Armies of Pestilence explores the impact of these diseases on history. Despite their importance, historians have tended to minimise the role of infectious disease - partly because of a lack of scientific knowledge, and this has resulted in a distorted view both of the past and of the danger of disease to modern society. In Armies of Pestilence, R.S. Bray, a distinguished biologist who here shows himself also to be an able historian, corrects this view. The book surveys the principal epidemics around the world and across the centuries, in each case discussing the origins of the outbreaks, the symptoms, the mortality rate and the social and economic effect. Where particular diseases cannot be identified with certainty the best scholarly opinions are discussed. Bray pays special attention to the infamous Yersina pestis, the organism that caused the Black Death. Other diseases discussed include malaria, smallpox, typhus, cholera and influenza, and AIDS. One of the themes of the book is the relationship between disease and war, with the former often causing more deaths than the latter, as was the case with the great influenza pandemic of 1918-19, at the end of the First World War. The inability of governments to deal effectively with disease is also made clear." |
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Resultat 1-5 av 58
Side
... Malaria ( part 1 ) 89 11 . Malaria ( part 2 ) 96 12 . Malaria ( part 3 ) 101 13 . Yellow Fever 107 14 . Smallpox ( part 1 ) 114 15 . Smallpox ( part 2 ) 123 16 . Smallpox ( part 3 ) 129 17 . Typhus ( part 1 ) 135 18 . Typhus ( part 2 ) ...
... Malaria ( part 1 ) 89 11 . Malaria ( part 2 ) 96 12 . Malaria ( part 3 ) 101 13 . Yellow Fever 107 14 . Smallpox ( part 1 ) 114 15 . Smallpox ( part 2 ) 123 16 . Smallpox ( part 3 ) 129 17 . Typhus ( part 1 ) 135 18 . Typhus ( part 2 ) ...
Side
... malaria . Parasites occur in the blood of chimpanzees and gorillas which are virtually indistinguishable from those causing malaria in people . It must be assumed therefore that we acquired malaria parasites from our ape ancestors at ...
... malaria . Parasites occur in the blood of chimpanzees and gorillas which are virtually indistinguishable from those causing malaria in people . It must be assumed therefore that we acquired malaria parasites from our ape ancestors at ...
Side 2
... malaria , but , as de Zulueta ( 1987 ) says , it is doubtful if this form of malaria was present in any great amount in Asia Minor in the years before Christ . Equally early Chinese records afford us no examples of history - making ...
... malaria , but , as de Zulueta ( 1987 ) says , it is doubtful if this form of malaria was present in any great amount in Asia Minor in the years before Christ . Equally early Chinese records afford us no examples of history - making ...
Side 4
... malaria . This seems unlikely , given our present understanding of the geographical distribution of cerebral malaria at that time . There remains the pestilence wished upon the people of Israel by David as his punishment for numbering ...
... malaria . This seems unlikely , given our present understanding of the geographical distribution of cerebral malaria at that time . There remains the pestilence wished upon the people of Israel by David as his punishment for numbering ...
Side 9
... malaria . In very nearly the same place a Carthaginian army , almost wiped out by disease , was defeated by the Syracusans only 17 years later in 396 BC , thus ending the Magonid dynasty in Carthage as well as ending Carthaginian ...
... malaria . In very nearly the same place a Carthaginian army , almost wiped out by disease , was defeated by the Syracusans only 17 years later in 396 BC , thus ending the Magonid dynasty in Carthage as well as ending Carthaginian ...
Innhold
1 | |
11 | |
19 | |
28 | |
35 | |
CHAPTER 6 The Black Death part 1 | 48 |
CHAPTER 7 The Black Death part 2 | 57 |
CHAPTER 8 The Black Death part 3 | 68 |
CHAPTER 16 Smallpox part 3 | 129 |
CHAPTER 17 Typhus part 1 | 135 |
CHAPTER 18 lYpbus part 2 | 144 |
CHAPTER 19 Cholera part 1 | 154 |
CHAPTER 20 Cholera part 2 | 167 |
CHAPTER 21 Cholera part 3 | 174 |
CHAPTER 22 Cholera part 4 | 187 |
CHAPTER 23 Influenza part 1 | 193 |
CHAPTER 9 Plague The Bombay Plague | 81 |
CHAPTER 10 Malaria part 1 | 89 |
CHAPTER 11 Malaria part 2 | 96 |
CHAPTER 12 Malaria part 3 | 101 |
CHAPTER 13 Yellow Fever | 107 |
CHAPTER 14 Smallpox part 1 | 114 |
CHAPTER 15 Smallpox part 2 | 123 |
CHAPTER 24 Influenza part 2 | 202 |
CHAPTER NOTES | 212 |
Bibliography | 223 |
Index | 237 |
Back Cover | 261 |
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