Sunday, January 26, 2020 at 12:53PM
Drew Wolfe

A History Of Quarantines, From Bubonic Plague To Typhoid Mary

"China is building a quarantine center on the outskirts of the city of Wuhan, where a newly identified virus has infected many hundreds of residents."

"The idea of putting a possibly sick person in quarantine goes back to the ancient texts. The book of Leviticus tells how to quarantine people with leprosy. Hippocrates covered the issue in a three-volume set on epidemics, though he came from a time in ancient Greece when disease was thought to spread from "miasmas," or foul-smelling gas that came out of the ground."

"With this new quarantine effort in the news, we offer a look at quarantine use — and abuse — over the ages."

Bubonic plague in Venice (1370)

"The so-called Black Death killed 20 million Europeans in the 14th century. So Venice, a major trade port, grew nervous. If a ship was suspected of harboring plague, it had to wait 40 days before any passengers or goods could come ashore. Venice built a hospital/quarantine center on an island off its coast, where sailors from plague-infested ships were sent either to get better, or, more likely, to die. This 40-day waiting period became known as quarantinario, from the Italian word for 40. As opinions about the disease changed, the isolation period shrank to trentinario — 30 days — but the original name stuck."

 

 

Article originally appeared on WorldWideWolfe II (http://drewhwolfe.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.