Armies of Pestilence: The Impact of Disease on HistoryThe influence that disease has had on history has often been hidden behind the more 'glorious' exploits of individuals and monarchs. In Armies of Pestilence R.S. Bray offers a fresh contribution to the impact that illnesses have had on world history. The periods discussed span from the Biblical accounts of epidemics, through the Justinian plague (what was that deadly disease that has kept scientists in contention right through to the present day?), to the miscalculated 1976 influenza epidemic from which the American government took a long time to recover. Dr. Bray covers the Plague (the scourge of medieval Europe), malaria, yellow fever, smallpox, typhus and cholera. The author offers a comprehensive evaluation of many other works, both scientific and historical, which provide a vast basis for research on this subject. His vigorous style and timely injections of humour make this an absorbing and accessible book. |
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LibraryThing Review
Brukerevaluering - jeremyjoslin - LibraryThingExcellent historic account of the major diseases to have plagued the Earth Les hele vurderingen
Innhold
Plague Justinians Plague part 1 | 19 |
Plague Justinians Plague part 3 | 35 |
Plague The Black Death part 1 48 | 68 |
Plague The Bombay Plague | 81 |
Malaria part 2 | 96 |
Smallpox part 1 | 114 |
Smallpox part 3 | 129 |
Typhus part 2 | 144 |
Cholera part 2 | 167 |
Cholera part 4 | 187 |
Influenza part 2 | 202 |
Bibliography | 223 |
237 | |
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Africa America Antonine plague Arabs areas army attack Aztecs became believes Belisarius Black Death blood Britain buboes bubonic plague cause centuries CHAPTER China cholera civilisation claimed commenced Conrad Cortez dead death rate death toll death-rate decline defeated demographic despite died Dols dysentery early effect Egypt El Tor England epidemic disease epidemic typhus epidemiology Europe European famine fourteenth-century France French Germany Hist immunity India infected infectious disease influenza Italy Justinian's plague killed land London loss lost louse major malaria Mecca medieval Mediterranean Middle East million mosquitoes occurred pandemic parasite patient pestis Plague of Athens pneumonic plague Pollitzer population Procopius public health quarantine reached River Roman Empire Rome Russia seems septicaemic plague sick smallpox Spain Spanish spread struck suffered Thucydides transmission transmitted troops typhus Univ vaccine vibrio virulence virus West yellow fever York Zinnser zoonosis zoonotic
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Sailors in the Holy Land: The 1848 American Expedition to the Dead Sea and ... Andrew C. A. Jampoler Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2005 |