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Antonine Plague
The angel of death striking a door during the plague of Rome: an engraving by Levasseur after Jules-Elie Delaunay
Diseaseprobably smallpox
First reported Seleucia
Date165-180
Deaths
5–10 million (estimated)
Fatality rate25 percent
The Roman Empire in 180 AD.

The Antonine Plague of AD 165 to 180, also known as the Plague of Galen (after Galen, the Greek physician who described it), was a prolonged and destructive epidemic, [1] which impacted the Roman Empire. It was possibly contracted and spread by soldiers who were returning from campaign in the Near East. Scholars generally believe the plague was smallpox, [1] [2] [3] although measles has also been suggested, [4] [5] [6] [7] and recent genetic evidence strongly suggests that smallpox only arose much later. [8] In AD 169 the plague may have claimed the life of the Roman emperor Lucius Verus, who was co-regnant with Marcus Aurelius. These two emperors had risen to the throne by virtue of being adopted by the previous emperor, Antoninus Pius, and as a result, their family name, Antoninus, has become associated with the pandemic.

Ancient sources agree that the plague is likely to have appeared during the Roman siege of the Mesopotamian city of Seleucia in the winter of 165–166, during the Parthian campaign of Lucius Verus. [9] Ammianus Marcellinus reported that the plague spread to Gaul and to the legions along the Rhine. Eutropius stated that a large proportion of the empire's population died from this outbreak. [10] According to the contemporary Roman historian Cassius Dio, the disease broke out again 9 years later in 189 AD and caused up to 2,000 deaths a day in the city of Rome, 25% of those who were affected. [11] The total death count has been estimated at 5–10 million, roughly 10% of the population of the empire. [12] [13] The disease was particularly deadly in the cities and in the Roman army. [14]

The Antonine plague occurred during the last years of what is called the Pax Romana, the high point in the influence, territorial control, and population of the Roman Empire. Historians differ in their opinions of the impact of the plague on the empire in the increasingly troubled eras after its appearance. Historians have noted similar plagues in the Han Empire of China during the mid-to-late 2nd century AD that caused devastating effects there, at a time when ancient Chinese historians claimed diplomatic contacts were made with what they perceived to be the Roman Empire. Based on archaeological records, Roman commercial activity in the Indian Ocean extending to the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia from ports of Roman Egypt seems to have suffered a major setback after the plague.

Economic growth and poor health

Epidemics were common in the ancient world, but the Antonine plague was the first known pandemic of the Roman Empire. [15] The Antonine plague spread throughout the Roman Empire, and perhaps other areas, including China, and infected many millions of people. The pandemic erupted during the last years of what is often considered the "golden age" [16] of Rome during the reign of co-emperor Marcus Aurelius. The Roman Empire at that time had a population estimated at 75 million people, about one-fourth of all human beings then living. Historians generally agree that the population of the Roman Empire peaked at about the time that the Antonine Plague appeared and, thereafter, population declined. [17]

The economic prosperity of the Roman Empire notwithstanding, the conditions were propitious for a pandemic. The population was unhealthy. About 20 percent of the population—a large percentage by ancient standards—lived in one of hundreds of cities; Rome, with a population estimated at one million, being the largest. The cities were a "demographic sink" even in the best of times. The death rate exceeded the birth rate and a constant in-migration of new residents was necessary to maintain the urban population. As perhaps more than one-half of children died before reaching adulthood, the average life expectancy at birth was only in the mid-twenties. Dense urban populations and poor sanitation contributed to the dangers of disease. The connectivity by land and sea between the vast territories of the Roman Empire made the transfer of infectious diseases from one region to another easier and more rapid than it was in smaller, more geographically confined societies. Epidemics of infectious diseases in the empire were common, with nine recorded between 43 BC and 148 AD. The rich were not immune to the unhealthy conditions. Only two of emperor Marcus Aurelius' fourteen children are known to have reached adulthood. [18]

A good indicator of nutrition and the disease burden is the average height of the population. The conclusion of the study of thousands of skeletons is that the average Roman was shorter in stature than the people of pre-Roman societies of Italy and the post-Roman societies of the Middle Ages. The view of historian Kyle Harper is that "not for the last time in history, a precocious leap forward in social development brought biological reverses". [19] Despite increasing development, average height did not increase in Europe between 1000 and 1800, while it increased in the 5th and 6th centuries during late antiquity. [20]

Spread of the disease

The traditional Roman view attributed the cause of the Antonine plague to the violation by the Roman army of a temple in the city of Seleucia during the Parthian campaign of Lucius Verus, then the soldiers carried it back to the Roman Empire from the Parthian Empire in early 166. However, the first documented case of the plague was in Smyrna (in Roman Anatolia) in 165 where the orator Aelius Aristides almost died from the disease. From the east the plague spread westward reaching Rome in 166 and nearly every corner of the empire by 172. The co-emperor Lucius Verus died from the plague in 169 and it ravaged the Roman army. [21] [22]

The plague endured until about 180 and another epidemic, possibly related, is reported by Dio Cassius to have struck the city of Rome in 189. Two thousand people in the city often died on a single day. Whether this new epidemic, or recurrence of the Antonine plague, impacted the empire outside the city of Rome is unknown. [23]

Epidemiology

A group of physicians in an image from the Vienna Dioscurides, named after the physician Galen shown at the top centre.

In 166, during the epidemic, the Greek physician and writer Galen traveled from Rome to his home in Asia Minor and returned to Rome in 168, when he was summoned by the two Augusti, the co-emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus. He was present at the outbreak among troops stationed at Aquileia in the winter of 168/69. Galen briefly recorded observations and a description of the epidemic in the treatise Methodus Medendi ("Method of Treatment"), and he scattered other references to it among his voluminous writings. He described the plague as "great" and of long duration, and mentioned fever, diarrhea, and pharyngitis as well as a skin eruption, sometimes dry and sometimes pustular, that appeared on the 9th day of the illness. The information that was provided by Galen does not unambiguously identify the nature of the disease, but scholars have generally preferred to diagnose it as smallpox. [24]

The historian William H. McNeill [25] asserts that the Antonine Plague and the later Plague of Cyprian (251–c. 270) were outbreaks of two different diseases, one of smallpox and one of measles but not necessarily in that order. The severe devastation to the European population from the two plagues may indicate that people had no previous exposure to either disease, which brought immunity to survivors. Other historians believe that both outbreaks involved smallpox. [26] The latter view is bolstered by molecular estimates that place the evolution of measles sometime after 1000 AD. [27] However, Galen's description of the Antonine Plague is not completely consistent with smallpox. [28]

Impact

Historians differ in their assessment of the impact of the Antonine Plague on Rome. To some, the plague was the beginning of the decline of the Roman Empire. To others, it was a minor event, documented by Galen and other writers but only slightly more deadly than other epidemics which frequently ravaged parts of the empire. Estimates of the fatalities from the pandemic range from 2 to 33% of the Roman Empire's population with deaths between 1.5 and 25 million people. Most estimates coalesce around a fatality rate of about 10% (7.5 million people) of the total population of the empire with death rates of up to 15% in the cities and the army. If the pandemic was indeed smallpox, the number who died would have probably been about 25% of those infected as the survival rate from smallpox is often around 75%, or 3 out of 4 people infected. [29] [30]

The traditional view was expressed by Barthold Georg Niebuhr (1776–1831) who concluded that "as the reign of Marcus Aurelius forms a turning point in so many things, and above all in literature and art, I have no doubt that this crisis was brought about by that plague ... The ancient world never recovered from the blow inflicted on it by the plague which visited it in the reign of Marcus Aurelius." [31] More recently, scholar Kyle Harper said something similar: the pandemic "in any account of Rome's destiny ... merit[s] a place squarely in the forefront." [32] To the contrary, a team of six historians questioned the "extreme" position of Harper and others on this plague as "ignoring scholarship that suggests it had a less than catastrophic outcome," but the historians affirmed that "we do not doubt that disease and climate had some of the impact Harper describes." [33]

Some historians have hypothesized that the epidemic resulted in a surge in the popularity of the cult of Asclepius, the god of medicine; the epigraphic record, however, shows no evidence of such increase in the cult's popularity. [34]

Impact on the Roman army

A Roman coin commemorating the victories of Marcus Aurelius in the Marcomannic Wars against the Germanic tribes along the Danube frontier in the early 170s AD

The ancient chroniclers portray the plague as a disaster for the Roman army with the army "reduced almost to extinction." [35] This came in 166 at the beginning at the Marcomannic Wars in which Germanic tribes were invading Roman territory south of the middle Danube River in what is now the Czech Republic and Slovakia, and south to Italy. The impact of the plague forced Marcus Aurelius to recruit and train additional soldiers from among "gladiators, slaves, and bandits." After a delay of two years, in 169 the emperor launched an attack against the Germanic tribes. By 171, the Roman army had driven the invaders out of Roman territory. The war would continue sporadically until 180 when Marcus Aurelius died, possibly of the plague. The plague may also have impacted the Germanic tribes. [36]

Indian Ocean trade and Han China

Although Ge Hong was the first writer of traditional Chinese medicine who accurately described the symptoms of smallpox, the historian Rafe de Crespigny mused that the plagues afflicting the Eastern Han Empire during the reigns of Emperor Huan of Han (r. 146–168) and Emperor Ling of Han (r. 168–189) – with outbreaks in 151, 161, 171, 173, 179, 182, and 185 – were perhaps connected to the Antonine plague on the western end of Eurasia. [37] De Crespigny suggests that the plagues led to the rise of the cult faith healing millenarian movement led by Zhang Jue (d. 184), who instigated the disastrous Yellow Turban Rebellion (184–205). [38] He also stated that "it may be only chance" that the outbreak of the Antonine plague in 166 coincides with the Roman embassy of " Daqin" (the Roman Empire) landing in Jiaozhi (northern Vietnam) and visiting the Han court of Emperor Huan, claiming to represent "Andun" (安敦; a transliteration of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus or his predecessor Antoninus Pius). [39] [40] [41]

Raoul McLaughlin wrote that the Roman subjects visiting the Han Chinese court in 166 could have ushered in a new era of Roman Far East trade, but it was a "harbinger of something much more ominous" instead. [42] McLaughlin surmised that the origins of the plague lay in Central Asia, from some unknown and isolated population group, which then spread to the Chinese and the Roman worlds. [42] The plague caused "irreparable" damage to the Roman maritime trade in the Indian Ocean as proven by the archaeological record spanning from Egypt to India as well as significantly decreased Roman commercial activity in Southeast Asia. [43] However, as evidenced by the 6th-century Christian Topography by Cosmas Indicopleustes, Roman maritime trade into the Indian Ocean, particularly in the silk and spice trades, certainly did not cease but continued until the loss of Egypt to the Muslim Rashidun Caliphate. [44] [45]

See also

Citations

  1. ^ a b Duncan-Jones, Richard (2018). "The Antonine Plague Revisited". ARCTOS: Acta Philologica Fennica. LII: 44.
  2. ^ Brooke, John L. (2014). "A Global Antiquity, 500 BC–AD 542". Climate Change and the Course of Global History. Cambridget Core. pp. 317–349. doi: 10.1017/CBO9781139050814.011. ISBN  9780521871648. Archived from the original on 29 September 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021. {{ cite book}}: |website= ignored ( help). Downloaded from Cambridge Core.
  3. ^ Littman, R. J.; Littman, M. L. (1973). "Galen and the Antonine Plague". The American Journal of Philology. 94 (3): 243–255. doi: 10.2307/293979. ISSN  0002-9475. JSTOR  293979. PMID  11616517.
  4. ^ Cunha, Cheston B.; Cunha, Burke A. (2008), Raoult, Didier; Drancourt, Michel (eds.), "Great Plagues of the Past and Remaining Questions", Paleomicrobiology: Past Human Infections, Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer, pp. 1–20, doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-75855-6_1, ISBN  978-3-540-75855-6, PMC  7121113, retrieved 11 May 2022
  5. ^ "There is not enough evidence satisfactorily to identify the disease or diseases", concluded J. F. Gilliam in his summary (1961) of the written sources, with inconclusive Greek and Latin inscriptions, two groups of papyri and coinage.
  6. ^ At least one study finds the origin of measles post-dates the plague. See Furuse, Y.; Suzuki, A.; Oshitani, H. (2010). "Origin of the Measles Virus: Divergence from Rinderpest Virus Between the 11th and 12th Centuries". Virology Journal. 7: 52–55. doi: 10.1186/1743-422X-7-52. PMC  2838858. PMID  20202190.
  7. ^ A more recent study finds that measles emerged well before the Antonine Plague. Düx, Ariane; Lequime, Sebastian; Patrono, Livia Victoria; Vrancken, Bram; Boral, Sengül; Gogarten, Jan F.; Hilbig, Antonia; Horst, David; Merkel, Kevin; Prepoint, Baptiste; Santibanez, Sabine (19 June 2020). "Measles virus and rinderpest virus divergence dated to the sixth century BCE". Science. 368 (6497): 1367–1370. Bibcode: 2020Sci...368.1367D. doi: 10.1126/science.aba9411. ISSN  0036-8075. PMC  7713999. PMID  32554594.
  8. ^ Newfield, Timothy P.; Duggan, Ana T.; Poinar, Hendrik (2022). "Smallpox's antiquity in doubt". Journal of Roman Archaeology. 35 (2): 897–913. doi: 10.1017/S1047759422000290. S2CID  252341032.
  9. ^ Sicker, Martin (2000). "The Struggle over the Euphrates Frontier". The Pre-Islamic Middle East. Greenwood. p. 169. ISBN  0-275-96890-1.
  10. ^ Eutropius XXXI, 6.24.
  11. ^ Dio Cassius, LXXII 14.3–4; his book that would cover the plague under Marcus Aurelius is missing; the later outburst was the greatest of which the historian had knowledge.
  12. ^ "Reactions to Plague in the Ancient & Medieval World". World History Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 23 April 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  13. ^ "Past pandemics that ravaged Europe". BBC News. 7 November 2005. Archived from the original on 7 October 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2008.
  14. ^ Smith, Christine A. (1996). "Plague in the Ancient World". The Student Historical Journal. Archived from the original on 6 August 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2008.
  15. ^ Harper, Kyle (2015). "Pandemics and passages to late antiquity: rethinking the plague of c.249–270 described by Cyprian". Journal of Roman Archaeology. 28: 223–260. doi: 10.1017/S1047759415002470. ISSN  1047-7594. S2CID  162904062.
  16. ^ Aldrete, Gregory S. (16 August 2020). "How Did the Golden Age of Rome End". The Great Courses Daily. The Great Courses. Archived from the original on 13 September 2021. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  17. ^ Harper, Kyle (2017). The Fate of Rome. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 10, 30–31, 67–68. ISBN  9780691166834.
  18. ^ Harper 2017, pp. 67–91.
  19. ^ Harper 2017, pp. 75–79.
  20. ^ Koepke, Nikola; Baten, Joerg (1 April 2005). "The biological standard of living in Europe during the last two millennia". European Review of Economic History. 9 (1): 61–95. doi: 10.1017/S1361491604001388. hdl: 10419/47594. JSTOR  41378413.
  21. ^ Wasson, Donald L. "Lucius Verus". World History Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  22. ^ Harper 2017, pp. 63–64, 99–101, 117.
  23. ^ Littman, R. J.; Littman, M.L. (Autumn 1973). "Galen and the Antonine Plague". The American Journal of Philology. 94 (3): 243–255. doi: 10.2307/293979. JSTOR  293979. PMID  11616517. Downloaded from JSTOR.
  24. ^ See McLynn, Frank, Marcus Aurelius, Warrior, Philosopher, Emperor, Vintage Books, London, 2009.[ page needed]
  25. ^ McNeill, W.H. 1976 Plagues and Peoples. New York Anchor Press. ISBN  0-385-11256-4[ page needed]
  26. ^ D. Ch. Stathakopoulos Famine and Pestilence in the late Roman and early Byzantine Empire (2007) 95
  27. ^ Furuse Y, Suzuki A, Oshitani H (2010), "Origin of measles virus: divergence from rinderpest virus between the 11th and 12th centuries.", Virol. J., 7 (52): 52, doi: 10.1186/1743-422X-7-52, PMC  2838858, PMID  20202190, S2CID  709881
  28. ^ Flemming, Rebecca (13 December 2018). "Galen and the Plague". Galen's Treatise Περὶ Ἀλυπίας (De indolentia) in Context: 219–244. doi: 10.1163/9789004383302_011. ISBN  9789004383289. Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  29. ^ Littman & Littman 1973, pp. 253–254.
  30. ^ Harper 2017, p. 108.
  31. ^ Niebuhr, Lectures on the history of Rome III, Lecture CXXXI (London 1849), quoted by Gilliam 1961:225
  32. ^ Harper 2017, p. 26.
  33. ^ Haldon, John; Elton, Hugh; Huebner, Sabine R.; Izdebski, Adam; Mordechai, Lee; Newfield, Timothy P. "Plagues, climate change, and the end of an empire: A response to Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome". Researchgate. Archived from the original on 15 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021. DOI: 10.1111/hic3.12508
  34. ^ Glomb, Tomáš; Kaše, Vojtěch; Heřmánková, Petra (June 2022). "Popularity of the cult of Asclepius in the times of the Antonine Plague: Temporal modeling of epigraphic evidence". Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 43: 103466. Bibcode: 2022JArSR..43j3466G. doi: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2022.103466. hdl: 11025/50932.
  35. ^ Duncan-Jones, R. P. (1996). "The impact of the Antonine plague". Journal of Roman Archaeology. 9. Cambridge University: 108–136. doi: 10.1017/S1047759400016524. S2CID  162095223. Archived from the original on 15 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  36. ^ Vlach, Marek (2020). "The Antonine Plague and Impact Possibilities During the Marcomannic Wars". In Erdrich, M.; Komoróczy, B.; Madejski, P.; Vlach, M. (eds.). Marcomannic Wars and the Antonine Plague: Selected Essays on Two Disasters That Shook the Roman World. Spisy Archeologického ústavu AV ČR Brno (in English and German). Brno; Lublin: Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Archaeology; Instytut Archeologii, Uniwersytet Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej. ISBN  9788075240262. OCLC  1268220329. Archived from the original on 15 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021 – via Research Gate.
  37. ^ de Crespigny, Rafe. (2007). A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms (23–220 AD). Leiden: Koninklijke Brill, p. 514, ISBN  978-90-04-15605-0.
  38. ^ de Crespigny, Rafe. (2007). A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms (23–220 AD). Leiden: Koninklijke Brill, pp. 514–515, ISBN  978-90-04-15605-0.
  39. ^ de Crespigny, Rafe. (2007). A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms (23–220 AD). Leiden: Koninklijke Brill, p. 600, ISBN  978-90-04-15605-0.
  40. ^ See also Pulleyblank, Edwin G. (1999). "The Roman Empire as Known to Han China". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 119 (1): 71–79. doi: 10.2307/605541. JSTOR  605541.
  41. ^ See also: Hill, John E. (2009). Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty, First to Second Centuries CE. BookSurge. ISBN  978-1-4392-2134-1, p. 27.
  42. ^ a b Raoul McLaughlin (2010), Rome and the Distant East: Trade Routes to the Ancient Lands of Arabia, India, and China, London & New York: Continuum, ISBN  978-1847252357, p. 59.
  43. ^ Raoul McLaughlin (2010), Rome and the Distant East: Trade Routes to the Ancient Lands of Arabia, India, and China, London & New York: Continuum, ISBN  978-1847252357, pp. 59–60.
  44. ^ Yule, Henry (1915). Henri Cordier (ed.), Cathay and the Way Thither: Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China, Vol I: Preliminary Essay on the Intercourse Between China and the Western Nations Previous to the Discovery of the Cape Route. London: Hakluyt Society, p. 25. Accessed 21 September 2016.
  45. ^ William H. Schoff (2004) [1912]. Lance Jenott (ed.). "'The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea: Travel and Trade in the Indian Ocean by a Merchant of the First Century' in The Voyage around the Erythraean Sea". Silk Road, Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities, University of Washington. Archived from the original on 24 February 2011. Retrieved 21 September 2016.

General and cited references