![]() A young doctor who has yet to establish a practice and is looking to get their start.They could be one of three kinds of people: These were the Plague Doctors.īecause of these desperate times, these doctors were far from the cream of the crop. Cities and townships formed contracts with individuals whose sole purpose would be to treat those infected with the Plague and to be quarantined with their patients while the outbreak persisted. With doctors fleeing and people dying, governments seemed to realise that particular measures were called for. However, governments still had to try and control the spread and keep track of the impact it was having. Before long, doctors would also contract the disease. Practices like bloodletting (draining an excess of blood to cure sickness) or applying poultices (a bag or substance used to draw out disease) either did nothing or hastened the death of a patient. With no way of understanding it, they had no way to treat it effectively. However, none of these theories were enough to help doctors stand in the face of the Black Death. Another was miasma theory: the idea that a foul smell in the air spread sickness and measures should be taken to ward it away. These four elements had to be balanced and having an excess or a lack of them resulted in sickness. One of the primary theories was the four humours, based on Ancient Greek medical practice and held that the human body was comprised of four elements. ![]() Germ theory would not be discovered until the 19th century, so doctors of the day had to conceive their own ideas for what spread disease. Medical practice at the time was also not prepared for disease of this magnitude. It was incredibly painful and most feared when the symptoms would manifest. After five days, the victim usually died unless the swellings burst. Over the next four days, the victim would break out in a fever, vomiting, bleeding under the skin (manifested as dark blotches) and painful spasms. The first day saw large, apple-sized swellings which typically appeared around the armpit, neck and groin. From there, it jumped from person to person, either through direct/close contact and contact with infected bodily fluids. The result was when the flea bit a human, it would regurgitate the infected substance into the wound and spread the sickness. The bacteria infected the flea and caused a blockage in its feeding tubes. The commonly accepted theory was that it initially infected rats, which were then bitten by fleas. The most likely culprit was a bacterium dubbed Yersinia pestis. By the 1400s, it was reduced to 2.5 million. ![]() Most figures show the population in the 1300s in Europe was about 5 million. Believed to have begun in Central or East Asia and travelling along the merchant route known as the Silk Road, it swiftly spread to Europe. But before that can be examined, we must first look at the circumstances which created them.Ĭonsidered to be one of the worst epidemics in history, the Black Death or the Great Plague began in 1348 and endured to 1350. But who were these strange men and what was the reason behind their peculiar garb? This post will serve to answer these questions. Harbingers of disease and foreboding symbols of ill intent, embodying the principle of long abandoned medical practices, seen today as laughable and silly. Today we know them as the Plague Doctors. The Italians called them Medico della Peste. A mask with a beak, like a bizarre bird that walks like a man. A strange figure, dressed in a sweeping black robe and carrying a wooden cane, their face obscured by both a wide brimmed hat and a very peculiar mask. It might be one that you are somewhat familiar with. Castle team member Daniel has been looking at the history behind a very sinister looking individual. ![]() With the beginning of the roll out of the Coronavirus vaccine, we thought it might be time to have a look at another of our Castle Characters, and at how our ancestors dealt with pandemic illnesses.
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