Epidemics Resulting from Wars
Transcriber’s Note:
The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
EPIDEMICS RESULTING
FROM WARS
PRINTED IN ENGLAND
AT THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
DIVISION OF ECONOMICS AND HISTORY
John Bates Clark, Director
By Dr. FRIEDRICH PRINZING
EDITED BY
HARALD WESTERGAARD
Friedrich Prinzing
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EPIDEMICS RESULTING FROM WARS
INTRODUCTORY NOTE BY THE DIRECTOR
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
I. The War in Bohemia and the Palatinate (1618–24)
II. The War in Saxony, Thuringia, Brandenburg, and Pomerania (1625–30)
III. The War Years 1630–40
IV. The War Years (1641–8)
V. War Pestilences in non-German States during the Thirty Years’ War
VI. A General Review of the Loss of Human Life in Germany during the Thirty Years’ War
1. General Observations regarding Typhus Fever
3. The Appearance of Typhus Fever in North and Central Germany
4. The Appearance of Typhus Fever in South Germany
5. Typhus Fever on the Left Bank of the Rhine; France and Switzerland
7. Survey of the Epidemic of Typhus Fever in the Years 1813–14
1. The Russo-Turkish War of 1828–9
2. The Crimean War (1854–6)
3. The North American Civil War (1861–5)
5. The Danish War of 1864
6. The German War of 1866
I. Size of the Armies
II. Dysentery, Typhoid Fever, and Typhus Fever
III. The Great Epidemic of Small-pox caused by the Franco-German War
2. The Boer War of 1899–1901
4. The Russo-Japanese War of 1904–5
5. The Occupation of Tripoli by the Italians (1911)
2. The Siege of Danzig (1813)
4. The Siege of Mayence (1813–14)
6. The Siege of Port Arthur (1904)
CONCLUSION
INDEX
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES