A History of Epidemic Pestilences / From the Earliest Ages, 1495 Years Before the Birth of our Saviour to 1848: With Researches into Their Nature, Causes, and Prophylaxis
Edward Bascome
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  • Kemp, Prof., [143]
  • Kendall’s fever, [115]
  • Khatemar, [48]
  • Kings of Ulster and Munster cut off by pestilence, [29]
  • Kingsai, earthquake near, [46]
  • Kurrachee, Dr. Gavin Milroy on the cholera at, [177];
  • the pestilence at, [212]
  • La grippe, [161]
  • La trousse galante, [158]
  • Lacedemonians, great mortality among the, [31]
  • ‘Ladendo,’ the, [61]
  • Lake Alba, [9]
  • Lancisius, [29], [30], [119]
  • Largostus, [124]
  • Latimer, [243]
  • Latium depopulated, [3]
  • Laurenciscus Rasius, [43]
  • Lazar-houses established at Valencia, [33]
  • Lazarettos, [211]
  • Lectisternium, the, [9]
  • Leprosy, [65], [94], [123];
  • in England, [38];
  • in Pompey’s army, [15];
  • in Spain, [15], [33];
  • introduction of, into Italy, [15];
  • pestilence of, [68]
  • ‘Leprous House,’ the, [249]
  • Leviticus, chap, xiv., [250]
  • Libya and Alexandria nearly destroyed, [23]
  • Light, chemical effects of, [219]
  • ——– essential to vitality, [218]
  • Ligurian pestilence, the, [26]
  • Lima, earthquake at, [94]
  • Lincoln, earthquake at, [36]
  • Lind, [129]
  • Linen, use of, [5]
  • Linneus, [222]
  • Lisbon, earthquake at, [47]
  • Livy, [3], [6], [11], [13]
  • Locality, influence of trade and, [179]
  • Locusts, [11], [13], [14], [30], [32], [84], [98], [104], [106], [127], [142];
  • dead bodies of, producing pestilence, [30];
  • immense swarms of, [23];
  • in Italy, [33];
  • swarms of, [46], [68], [69], [76], [81]
  • Loes, [161]
  • ‘Loimic’ pestilence, a, [18]
  • Loimikié, [6]
  • Loimoi, [21]
  • Loimos in Syria, [21]
  • London Bridge, wrecks at, [117]
  • London, deadly fevers in, [79];
  • destroyed by fire, [31];
  • earthquake in, [127];
  • famine in, [31];
  • filthy condition of, [43];
  • habits of the inhabitants of, [44];
  • low fevers of, [225];
  • malignant fever in, [31];
  • plague in, [104];
  • starvation in, [38];
  • the burning of, by the Danes, [30];
  • the condition of, [205];
  • the dwellings of, [206];
  • the great fire of, [205];
  • the plague of, [207];
  • the rebuilding by Alfred, [30];
  • water conveyed to by leaden pipes, [43];
  • water first brought by the New River to, [98]
  • Long continuance of pestilence in Asia, [24]
  • —— rain, [50]
  • Lotion, urine as a topical, [5]
  • Low fever of London, [225]
  • —— water in the Thames, [34]
  • Lucretius, [7], [199]
  • Lues Pannonica, [90]
  • Luis Alcanyis, [68]
  • Macedonia, earthquake in, [23]
  • Madness, epidemic, in England, [53]
  • Madrid, sanitary state of, [129]
  • Magdenburg, [29], [30]
  • Mal des pieds et des mains, [157]
  • Maladie de Siam, the, [113]
  • Maladies, causes of, [189]
  • ———–, Old and New Testaments on the, [193];
  • instances explanatory of the causes of, [193]
  • Malignant dysentery, [2], [61], [77];
  • among the Romans, [12];
  • epizootic, among cattle, [13];
  • fevers, [98], [103];
  • measles, [110];
  • pneumonia, [76]
  • Mania, epidemic, [123]
  • Man-cyalm, [27], [28]
  • Manson, Dr. [140]
  • Marcellinus, [23]
  • Marcellus, death of, [238]
  • Marcus Curtius, [9]
  • Mariana, [8], [10]
  • Marselio Ficino, [78]
  • Martin Arrendondo, [43]
  • Martinez de Leyva, [48], [66]
  • Mas, Dr. [100]
  • Masdevall, Dr., [138]
  • Mass, celebrated in Scio, [55]
  • M’Culloch, [42]
  • Meade, Dr. [209]
  • Measles, [35], [98], [122], [138], [171];
  • malignant, [110]
  • Measles, preceding pestilences, [92]
  • ———, small-pox and, [24]
  • Measures, precautionary, [60]
  • Mediterranean frozen over, [30], [39], [61];
  • inundations round the, [23]
  • Mephitic vapours, charging the air with, [12]
  • Merriman, Dr., [169]
  • Messina destroyed by earthquake, [114]
  • Metamorphosis of tadpoles, [221]
  • Meteors, [32], [40], [81], [99]
  • Mexico, earthquake in, [136]
  • Michaelis, [249]
  • Middleton, Sir Hugh, [98]
  • Mildew of corn, [113]
  • Miliary fever, [120], [122]
  • ——— pestilence, [111]
  • Milroy, Dr. Gavin, on the cholera at Kurrachee, [177]
  • Minchinhampton, churchyard of, [247]
  • Miraculous bell of Velilla, [79]
  • Mists, stinking, [86]
  • ‘Mode of avoiding plague,’ [47]
  • Moderation and cleanliness among the Spaniards, [5]
  • Modern nomenclature, [188]
  • Moist atmosphere, [59]
  • Moisture, [80];
  • excessive, [65], [66]
  • ‘Morbeira,’ a, or Board of Health, [68]
  • Morbid phenomena of a plague at Athens, [7]
  • Morbus Gallicus, [71]
  • ——— Hungaricus, [90]
  • Morena, Dr., [122]
  • Mormonites, disease among, [175]
  • Mortal angina, [112]
  • Mortality among sheep, [38];
  • great, among the Lacedemonians, [31]
  • Morton, [107]
  • Mosaic ordinances, the, [248]
  • Mosquitoes, [143];
  • and flies, [114]
  • Mould-spots, or signacula, [74]
  • ————— and red water, [85]
  • Mountain of Tsincheou, falling of, [46]
  • Mox, Dr., [100]
  • Murator, [3], [30]
  • Murrain, [3], [35], [42], [51], [74], [120], [126], [128], [135], [142], [144], [155], [164], [180];
  • among cattle, [31];
  • among sheep, [42]
  • Naples, earthquakes at, [103], [110], [143];
  • syphilis at, [73];
  • the disease of, ibid.
  • Narses, pestilence in the time of, [26]
  • Natural causes for pestilences, [214]
  • Nature and causes of epidemic pestilences, [184–207]
  • Navy, condition of the, [217]
  • Necropolis, earthquake in, [19]
  • New River, water first brought by the, to London, [98]
  • Newgate, [225]
  • Nicephorus, [22], [23], [27]
  • Nicomedia, earthquake in, [19]
  • Nile, the, [212];
  • inundation of the, [23]
  • Nomenclature, modern, [188]
  • Nuestro Alonso, [16]
  • Ocampo, [8]
  • Odessa, earthquake at, [166]
  • Œsophagitis, epidemic, [78]
  • Old and New Testaments on the causes of maladies, [193]
  • Ordinances, the Mosaic, [248]
  • Organism of the earth, revolutions in the, [45]
  • Origin of the venereal disease, [73]
  • Orosius, [6], [9], [12], [13], [17]
  • Otho’s army destroyed by pestilence, [31]
  • Overflow of the Severn, [69]
  • Ovid, [200]
  • Palestine, earthquake in cities of, [23]
  • Palmer-worms, [42]
  • Papal jubilee, a, [55]
  • Papiliones, [34]
  • Parè, [85]
  • Pasqual, [87]
  • Patroclus, funeral of, [238]
  • Paulus Diaconus, [26]
  • Paving Act, a, passed, [131]
  • Pedro Bayro, [76]
  • Pedro Martyr de Anglesia, [71]
  • Peripneumoniæ, [52]
  • Pernicious intermittent, a, [107]
  • Persians, interment by the, [239]
  • Personal cleanliness, [233]
  • Peru, earthquakes at, [93], [129]
  • Pestiferous blight, [192];
  • wind, [51]
  • Pestilence in Egypt, A.M. 2509, [1];
  • at Kadesh, [2];
  • at Baal-peor, [2];
  • at Ægina, [2];
  • at Ashdod, [2];
  • in the time of David, [2];
  • in Rome, [3], [4], [6], [9], [10], [11], [12], [16], [17], [18], [19], [20], [21], [23], [27], [28], [38], [72];
  • in Campania, [3];
  • in Italy, [3], [11], [20], [27], [30], [33], [37], [67], [69];
  • at Jerusalem, [4], [16];
  • in the army of Xerxes, [4];
  • immunity of the Spaniards at Syracuse, [4];
  • in Spain, [6], [8], [10], [20], [23], (singular) [25], [27], [37], [43], [48], [59], [66], [75], [76], [77], [89], [91], [93], [95], [97], [98];
  • at Athens, [7];
  • in Persia, [7];
  • in Egypt, [8], [20];
  • in Carthage, [8], [10], [13];
  • in Andalusia, [9], [55], [71];
  • in Saguntum, [9], [10];
  • in Capua, [11];
  • among the Roman and Rhodian fleets, [11];
  • in Palestine, [13];
  • in Numantia, [13];
  • in Africa, [13];
  • in Numidia, [13];
  • among the Roman armies, [15];
  • in Palestine, [16];
  • in Asia Minor, [16];
  • at Babylon, [17];
  • in Greece and Italy, [17];
  • from Italy to India, [17];
  • in the North of England, [18];
  • in Scotland, [18], [19], [20], [24], [29], [30], [31], [43];
  • in Wales, [18], [22], [24], [29];
  • in England, [19], [20], [23], [31], [32], [35], [37], [38], [39], [40], [41], [42], [44], [50], [52], [55], [59], [65], [69], [75], [81], [83], [84], [86];
  • in Arabia, [19];
  • in Asia, [19], [20];
  • in Ethiopia, [20];
  • in France, [20], [25], [29], [56], [61], [62], [77], [78], [80], [85], [98];
  • among the Scythians, [21];
  • in Alexandria, [21];
  • in England and Wales, [21];
  • in Syria, [21];
  • in Britain, [22];
  • in Amida, [23];
  • in Italy and Syria, [23];
  • in Judea, [23];
  • in Asia, Africa, and Europe, [23];
  • in Constantinople, [23];
  • in Cappadocia, Galatia, and Phrygia, [23];
  • in Asia and Africa, [24];
  • in Palestine, [24];
  • in Europe and Asia, [24];
  • in Germany and Italy, [25];
  • in the time of Narses, [26];
  • in Britain, Turenne, and the provinces of Arragon and Vivares, [27];
  • at Mecca, [27];
  • in Syria and Arabia, [27];
  • at Constantinople, [27];
  • in the south coasts of Britain and provinces of the Northumbrians, [27];
  • in Great Britain and Ireland, [27], [28];
  • in Syria and Mesopotamia, [28];
  • in Syria and Libya, [28];
  • in Constantinople, [29];
  • at Norwich, [29];
  • in Syria, [29];
  • in Calabria, Naples, and Constantinople, [29];
  • at Chichester, [29];
  • in Germany, [29];
  • in Gaul, [30];
  • in France and Germany, [30];
  • at Oxford, [30];
  • in London, [31], [41], [42], [49], [61], [77];
  • in Gaul, Germany, and Italy, [31];
  • in London, [31];
  • in the north of Europe, [31];
  • in Otho’s army, [31];
  • in England and Europe, [32];
  • England and Gaul, [32];
  • in England, Gaul, and Germany, [33];
  • among the Saracen invaders of Rome, [33];
  • in Egypt and Arabia, [33];
  • in York and Durham, [32];
  • at Constantinople, [33];
  • in Italy, Russia, Flanders, and England, [33];
  • in Europe, [34], [38];
  • in Judea, [34];
  • in Scotland, Ireland, Italy, Gaul, Sicily, Judea, Asia, and Africa, [35];
  • in England and Rome, [36];
  • in Castile, [36];
  • in the army of the Crusaders at Acre, [36];
  • in Catalonia, [37];
  • at Cordova, [37];
  • in Damietta, [37];
  • in Germany, Hungary, Gaul, and Egypt, [38];
  • in Denmark, Italy, and Gaul, [39];
  • in the army of St. Louis, the Crusader, [40];
  • among the Crusaders, [42];
  • in Britain, Italy, Poland, Denmark, Prussia, Zealand, Egypt, Germany, Bohemia, and Spain, [42];
  • at Gerona, [42];
  • at Barcelona, [46], [50], [55], [61];
  • at Tche, [46];
  • in China, Syria, Greece, Egypt, Asia, and Africa, [48];
  • in Italy and Sicily, [48];
  • in Granada, [48];
  • in Upper Asia, [48];
  • in Cathay, [48];
  • in Asia, Egypt, Greece, Italy, France, Spain, England, and Germany, [49];
  • in Florence, [49];
  • in Norwich, [49];
  • in Venice, [49];
  • in Lubeck, [49];
  • in Syria, [49];
  • on the shores of the Pontic, [49];
  • in Greece and Illyria, [49];
  • in Mallorca, [38], [49], [60], [68], [71];
  • in Valencia and Catalonia, [50];
  • in Sicily and Sardinia, [50];
  • in Greenland, [51];
  • in Cyprus, [51];
  • at Southampton, [52];
  • in France and Germany, [52];
  • in Ireland, Holland, and England, [52];
  • in Germany, Russia, Hungary, Spain, and Gaul, [52];
  • in Denmark and Iceland, [52];
  • among the Oxford students, [52];
  • in Montpelier, [52];
  • in England, Africa, Cyprus, Italy, Florence, Gaul, Ireland, and Scotland, [53];
  • at Cologne, [55];
  • in England and Ireland, [55];
  • in Italy and Gaul, [55];
  • in Germany, Egypt, Greece, and Lubeck, [55];
  • in Holland and the Rhenish provinces, [56];
  • in the Shetland islands, [56];
  • in Seville, [59], [61], [70], [85], [97];
  • in Gallicia, [60];
  • in Benavento, Matillas, Arzon, Villalobos, Rales, and Valderas, [60];
  • at Norfolk and York, [61];
  • in Valencia and Catalonia, [61];
  • at Florence, [61];
  • in Bourdeaux, Aquitaine, and Gascony, [61];
  • at Seville, [62];
  • at Barcelona, [62], [65], [67], [68], [69], [73], [75], [76], [79], [88], [94], [97];
  • in Dantzic, [65];
  • at Huesca, [65];
  • in Italy, Gaul, Germany, Asia, and Spain, [66];
  • at Saragossa, [67];
  • at Cadiz, [67];
  • at Parma, [67];
  • at Valencia, [68];
  • in Switzerland and Germany, [69];
  • in Westphalia, Hesse, and Friesland, [69];
  • in France, [69], [89];
  • in Ireland, [70];
  • in Germany, Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, and Egypt, [70];
  • in Saragossa and Aragon, [71];
  • in Granada, [71];
  • in Saragossa, [73], [83];
  • in Germany, Portugal, and Ireland, [73];
  • among Portuguese crews, [74];
  • in Britain, [74];
  • in Brussels, [74];
  • in France and Germany, [74];
  • in China, [75];
  • in Ireland, [75];
  • in Lisbon, [75];
  • in Cadiz, [76];
  • in Constantinople, [76];
  • in Germany, [76];
  • in Europe, [76];
  • in Verona, [77];
  • in Oxford and Cambridge, [77];
  • at Calais, [78];
  • in Germany, [78];
  • in Holland, [78];
  • in Hispaniola, [78];
  • in Navarre, [78];
  • in Valencia, [78], [79];
  • at Dresden, [79];
  • in Milan, [79];
  • in Xativa and Seville, [79];
  • in Lower Germany, Holland, Zealand, Brabant, Flanders, Denmark, Norway, and France, [79];
  • at Wurtemburg, [79];
  • at Aragon, [79];
  • in London, [79];
  • in Ireland and Italy, [79];
  • in Amsterdam, [81];
  • at Hamburg, [81];
  • in Germany, [82];
  • at Lubeck, Stettin, and Zwickau, [82];
  • at Brussels, [82];
  • in Pomerania, [82];
  • in Germany and Denmark, [83];
  • in Aragon, [83];
  • in Italy and Spain, [83];
  • in Lisbon, [83];
  • in Narbonne, [83];
  • in Cork and Dresden, [83];
  • in Hungary, [84];
  • in Constantinople, [84];
  • at Metz, [84];
  • in Savoy, France, [84];
  • England, Holland, and Germany, [85];
  • in Prussia, [85];
  • in Murcia and Portugal, [85];
  • in Valencia, [85];
  • in London, [86], [88], [91], [95];
  • in Messina, [86];
  • in Paris, Hungary, and Transylvania, [86];
  • in England and France, [86];
  • among Spanish soldiery, [87];
  • in Vienna and Holland, [87];
  • in Spain and France, [87];
  • in Murcia, [88];
  • in Europe, [88];
  • along the Rhine, [89];
  • at Comorra, [90];
  • at Seville, [90];
  • in Friesland, [91];
  • in Dresden, [91];
  • in Spain and Italy, [91];
  • among prisoners at Oxford, [91];
  • in Europe, [92];
  • at Marseilles, [93];
  • in Flanders, Moravia, London, Germany, and Holland, Egypt, and Rome, [94];
  • in Madrid, [94];
  • in Valladolid, [94];
  • in Dresden, [95];
  • in Malta, [95];
  • in England, Constantinople, and Spain, [95];
  • in Muscovy, [95];
  • in Granada, [96];
  • in Gallicia, [96];
  • in Seville, [96];
  • at Jaen, [96];
  • in England, [96];
  • in Europe, [96];
  • in the fleet of Sir Thomas Gates and Sir George Somers, [97];
  • in Ragusa, [97];
  • in Granada, [97];
  • in Germany, [98], [99];
  • at Constantinople, [98];
  • in Crete, Alexandria, Calabria, Turkey, Italy, Dalmatia, Venice, Germany, France, Poland, Flanders, Persia, and Asia, [98];
  • in England, [98];
  • at Naples, Bergen, Norway, Denmark, Egypt, the Levant, North and South America, Hungary, France, and England, Seville, [99];
  • London, Amsterdam, Spain, Argel, England, Italy, Denmark, Egypt, Lyons, France, Narbonne, Cambridge, America, Marseilles, Catalonia, and Guadix, [100];
  • in Europe, [103];
  • in South America, [104];
  • in the United States of America, [104];
  • in Oxford, [104];
  • in Madrid, Denmark, England, and Andalusia, [104];
  • in Ireland, America, West Indies, Spain, England, France, Denmark, [105];
  • in Russia, Poland, Carmona, Andalusia, Tortosa, Gerona, Huesca, Barcelona, and Girona, [106];
  • in England, Denmark, Turkey, Russia, Presburg, Hungary, Italy, Egypt, Malta, Sardinia, Leyden, Riga, Amsterdam, Morocco, Naples, Rome, France, and North America, [107];
  • in England, Venice, Leipsic, and Copenhagen, [108];
  • in Salamanca, Lisbon, the United States, Norway, and England, [110];
  • in Aquitaine, Sologne, Galinois, Montagris, [111];
  • in Spain, Hungary, England, Malta, and Hamburg, [111];
  • in Carthagena, the United States, and Europe, Spain, Algeria, Morocco, Andalusia, Germany, Dresden, England, Italy, Poland, Switzerland, Ireland, Sardinia, Malaga, Antequera, Granada, Moron, Ronda, Lucena, Andujar, Xeres, Santa Maria, and Cadiz, [112];
  • in Berberia, in Europe, and America, [113];
  • among animals, [114];
  • in Stuttgart, Dusseldorf, Erfurt, Jena, United States, Spain, Italy, and Jamaica, [114];
  • in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Barbadoes, Berlin, among the American Indians, Spain, North America, China, England, France, Liorna, Geneva, Cerdena, Narbonne, and Nismes, [115];
  • among the Anglo-Americans, [115];
  • in Spain, England, Scotland, Friesland, the United States, and Freiburg, [116];
  • in Ceuta, Tunis, Malaga, Cerdena, [118];
  • in Rome, South America, Spain, Andalusia, Dantzic, Holland, Cologne, Lucerne, Zurich, Berne, Orleans, Sweden, [119];
  • in Copenhagen, Lithuania, Italy, Germany, Mümpelgart, Constantinople, England, United States, Breslau, Turin, [120];
  • in the Asturias, Aleppo, Marseilles, [121];
  • in Toulon, Aix, and Arles, Provence, in the Lower Seine, Jamaica, Spain, Granada, Placentia, London, America, Vienna, Hungary, Upper Saxony, Silesia, Lisbon, Frankfort, [122];
  • in Granada, Andalusia, Carthage, the United States, South America, [123];
  • at Chambery, Annecy, Savoy, Carmagnola, Vercelli, Ivrea, Biella, Vienna, Pignerol, Fossano, Nizza, Rivoli, Asti, Larti, Acqui, Basle, Silesia Thrasburg, Trino, Frésneuse, Vimeux, Orleans, Plouviers, Meaux, Villeneuve, Bohemia, Denmark, Sweden, Russia, Cadiz, Andalusia, London, United States, Spain, [124];
  • in Coburg, Egypt, France, England, Scotland, Ireland, Holland, Calabria, Switzerland, New Spain, Aleppo, Tangiers, Smyrna, United States, West Indies, North America, Seville, Grand Cairo, England, and Bohemia, [125];
  • in Spain, Ireland, Germany, Siberia, Turkey, Switzerland, Germany, Poland, Holland, and England, [126];
  • in Huesca, the Asturias, Constantinople, United States, London, Isen and Cordova, [127];
  • in England, North America, Normandy, Ireland, France, Constantinople, Syria, Smyrna and Cyprus, Aleppo, Jerusalem and Damascus, West India Islands, [128];
  • in Africa, United States, Senegal, [129];
  • in Carthagena, Cyprus, the Ottoman Empire, United States, West Indies, Madrid, [130];
  • in United States, Havannah, Siam, Bengal, Syria, Egypt, France, Denmark, Madrid, Genoa, Sweden, Naples, [131];
  • in Spain, Carthagena, Suabia, Scotland, Ireland, Austria, United States, West Indies, [132];
  • in Europe, United States, Germany, Spain, Carthagena, Jamaica, Holland, Bengal, [133];
  • in Sardinia, Holland, Flanders, Poland, Russia, Bohemia, Vienna, [134];
  • Moscow, Bassora, the Ganges, Scotland, United States, France, [135];
  • Constantinople, England, Spain, [136];
  • United States, Spain, South America, [137];
  • England, United States, Garigani, Languedoc, [138];
  • Catalonia, Tortosa, Aragon, Alcarria, Andalusia, [139];
  • Carthagena, La Mancha, Havannah, United States, [140];
  • America, Grenada, [141];
  • Africa, Egypt, England, the Havannah, Hungary, Servia, [142];
  • West India Islands, United States, [143];
  • United States, Barbary, Morocco, [144], [145], [146];
  • in England and Ireland, Germany, Gibraltar, Constantinople, [147];
  • in London, Gibraltar, Malta, [148], [149];
  • in Corfu, India, United States, Jessore, [150], [151], [152];
  • Mauritius, United States, West Indies, East Indies, [152], [153];
  • in the Indian Archipelago, Bassora, Bagdad, China, the Moluccas, Ispahan, Chinese Tartary, Ireland, France, Lapland, Africa, South America, [154], [155];
  • in Rio de Janeiro, Hamburg, Grand Cairo, Germany, United States, England, West Indies, Gibraltar, [156], [157];
  • in Naples, France, England, Ireland, America, Russia, Persia, Poland, Moldavia, Berlin, Vienna, Hamburg, Alexandria, the Delta of the Nile, [158], [159];
  • in France, [161];
  • in England, United States, Russia, Germany, France, Turkey, Gibraltar, [162], [163];
  • in India, Prussia, Warsaw, Egypt, Alexandria, Grand Cairo, [164], [165];
  • Leghorn, Odessa, Europe, North and South America, West India Islands, [166], [167];
  • in Rome, Syria, Moscow, Orenburg, England, Ireland, Asia, United States, London, [168], [169];
  • England, Russia, Sweden, Denmark, France, Cape of Good Hope, Mount St. Bernard, Algiers, St. Petersburg, Texas, [170], [171];
  • Germany, Scotland, Syria, United States, Africa, [172], [173];
  • in Persia, Senegal, Germany, Holland, Belgium, France, England, Africa, among Mormonites, [174], [175];
  • in Scotland, Ireland, Afghanistan, Persia, Tartary, Bagdad, Kurrachee, [176], [177];
  • in Gallicia, Persia, Tauris, Teheran, Bakrou, Caucasian Provinces, Tiflis, the Caucasus, Russia, [178], [179];
  • Wallachia, Scotland, Portugal, Spain, France, Russia, Turkey, Marseilles, United States, Trebizond, Silesia, England, [180], [181]
  • Pestilence among animals, [98]
  • ————, the black, [50]
  • ————, a bubonic, [79]
  • ————, dead bodies of locusts producing, [30]
  • ————, De Foe on the causes of, [206]
  • ————, Egypt a hot-bed of, [195];
  • fatal to breeding women and cattle, [10];
  • a filthy smelling vapour causing, [49];
  • the Kings of Ulster and Munster cut off by, [29];
  • at Kurrachee, [212];
  • of leprosy, [68];
  • a ‘loimic,’ [18];
  • long continuance of, [29];
  • long continuance of, in Asia, [24];
  • the Ligurian, [26]
  • ————, a miliary, [111]
  • ————, originating from famine, [28];
  • petechial, [147]
  • ————, rains and, [31]
  • ————, statistics of, [53]
  • ————, the true, [24]
  • ————, yellow, [99], [100], [104], [113], [151], [153], [155], [157]
  • ————, epidemic, nature and causes of, [184–207]
  • ————, natural causes for, [214]
  • Pestilential angina, [116];
  • constitution, [187];
  • or scarlet sore-throat, [24]
  • ‘Pestis flava,’ [29]
  • Petechial fever, [80], [128], [171]
  • ———– pestilence, [147];
  • treatment of, [94]
  • Pharaoh IV., prodigies in the natural world in the reign of, [1]
  • Phenomena, remarkable, [108]
  • Philo on a ‘loimic’ pestilence, [18]
  • Phrenitis, putrid fever with, [69]
  • Picenum, famine in, [25]
  • Pintor, [72]
  • Plague, [24], [77], [103], [111], [112], [125], [136], [142], [145], [147], [149], [163], [164], [172];
  • at Athens, morbid phenomena of a, [7]
  • ———, bilious, [116], [141]
  • ——— of Boja, the, [71]
  • ———, cure for the, [84]
  • ———, dreadful, [121], [124]
  • ——— of Egypt, [200]
  • ——— flies, [158]
  • ———, the great, [183]
  • Plague in London, [100], [104], [207]
  • ———, mode of avoiding, [47]
  • ——— of Siberia, the, [162]
  • ———, a terrific, [48]
  • ———, treatment of, [78], [94]
  • Planets, origin of the venereal disease attributed to conjunction of the, [72]
  • Pleurisies, [33], [35]
  • Pliny, [17]
  • Plutarch, [3], [7], [238]
  • Poison, atmospheric, [79]
  • Poisonous effects from disturbing a graveyard, [247]
  • ———— vapours of lake Avernus, [4]
  • Pompeii and Herculaneum, [17]
  • Pompey’s army, leprosy in, [15]
  • Pope and the Fleet ditch, [44]
  • Pope Sextus erects a brothel at Rome, [67]
  • Porcell, Dr., [89]
  • Porpoises in the Baltic, disease among, [82]
  • Potato disease, [172], [174], [176], [182]
  • Pox, the French, [71]
  • Prayers, public, [66];
  • rogatory, [79]
  • Precautionary measures, [60]
  • Predisposing causes of disease, [191]
  • Prevention, [217]
  • Prisons on the Continent, [225];
  • Savoy and Newgate, ibid.
  • Processions, imprecatory, instituted, [55], [59];
  • solemn, [67], [68]
  • Procopius, [25], [26]
  • Prodigies in the natural world in the reign of Pharaoh IV., [1]
  • Profligacy and imposture, [63]
  • Prophecy of Agabus, [17]
  • Prophylaxis, or mode of preventing disease, [216–250]
  • Prostitutes taxed, [67]
  • Puerperal fever, [108], [138], [147]
  • Puiz, Dr., [113]
  • Purchas, [97]
  • Putrid fever, a, [71];
  • with phrenitis, [69]
  • Quinsies, [88]
  • Quinsey, [35], [98], [120]
  • Quarantine, [211]
  • Rain, blood-coloured, [82]
  • —— of crimson insects, [3]
  • ——, long, [50];
  • remarkable fall of, [150];
  • a shower of, frozen, [111];
  • in torrents, [46]
  • Rains and pestilence, [31]
  • ——, excessive, [30], [32], [40], [103];
  • heavy, [39], [41], [54], [66], [70], [85], [86], [99], [104], [170]
  • Ramon Vila, [46], [76]
  • Rebuilding of London by Alfred, [30]
  • Red water and mould-spots, [85]
  • Registrar-General’s Report on the Influenza of 1847, [181], [182], [183]
  • Remarkable phenomena, [108]
  • Remedy for pestilential fever, [122]
  • Remittent fever, [172], [176];
  • on board the ‘Eclair,’ [174]
  • Render, Rev. Dr., [245]
  • Reports on Cholera, [169]
  • Revolution in the organism of the earth, [45]
  • Rhone, the, frozen over, [30]
  • Rivére, [161]
  • Ribeiro, Dr., [5]
  • Riverius, [98]
  • Rogatory prayers, [79]
  • Romans, the ancient, and the bath, [231];
  • malignant dysentery among the, [12]
  • Rome, earthquake at, [9], [117];
  • Pope Sextus erects a brothel at, [67];
  • the site of, [204]
  • Rosell, Dr., [100]
  • Rush, Dr., [141]
  • Russell, Dr. Patrick, [209]
  • Russia, famine in, [33]
  • Rye, disease in, [106]
  • Rymer, [52]
  • Sacrifices, [6]
  • Sætabi, vapour baths of the, [5]
  • Saguntum, earthquake at, [10]
  • Saine, Dr., [125]
  • Salii, institution of the, [3]
  • Salted provisions, the use of, [15]
  • Sanchez, Dr., [5], [72]
  • Sanitary state of Madrid, [129]
  • Sastre, Dr., [113]
  • Sauvages, [15], [126]
  • Savoy Prison, [225]
  • Scarlatina, [116]
  • Scarlet fever, [35], [142];
  • sore-throat, [24]
  • Schenckius, [74], [89]
  • Scripture against contagion, [213]
  • Scurvy, [21], [74];
  • epidemic, [73]
  • Sea broke out at Dort, [66]
  • —–, Winchelsea swallowed up by the, [41]
  • Seasons, intemperate, [31];
  • inclement, [34], [40], [41], [42], [43], [65], [105], [108], [112], [131], [133], [142], [145], [150], [168], [169], [170]
  • Senertus, [86], [161]
  • Sepulture, Chinese mode of, [239]
  • ‘Serpentine Disease,’ the, [84]
  • Servius, [238]
  • Severe frost, [37], [65], [66], [103], [113], [129], [140];
  • storm, [118];
  • winter, [30], [31], [35], [38], [41], [55], [94], [98], [137], [145], [148]
  • Severn, the, overflowed, [69]
  • Seville, earthquake at, [60]
  • Sheep, mortality among, [38];
  • murrain among, [42]
  • Shipping, entry of, prohibited in Sicily, [75]
  • Short, [29], [30], [97]
  • Shower of fish, a, [163];
  • of rain, frozen, [111]
  • Showers, extraordinary, [59]
  • Shropshire, earthquake in, [18]
  • Siberia, the plague of, [162]
  • Sibylline books, the, [9]
  • Sicily, earthquake in, [142];
  • entry of shipping prohibited in, [75]
  • Sickness among the Edinburgh police, [227]
  • ‘———, the great,’ [116]
  • ———, the sweating, [70], [75], [77], [79], [80], [81], [83], [86], [114], [119]
  • Siege of Jerusalem, [3];
  • of Troy, [199]
  • Signacula, or mould-spots, [74]
  • Silius Italicus, [5]
  • Simon, Mr., [222]
  • Singular pestilence in Spain, [25]
  • Site of Rome, the, [204]
  • Skin, the functions of the, [235]
  • Small-pox, [35], [78], [98], [112], [116], [120];
  • confluent, [22];
  • pestilential, at Mecca, [27];
  • treatment of, [131];
  • virulent, [111]
  • ———— and measles, [24]
  • Smith, Dr. Southwood, [234]
  • Sneezing induced by conditions of the atmosphere, [27]
  • Snow, heavy fall of, [169]
  • —— in harvest-time, [32]
  • Snow-storm, a, [100]
  • Socrates on bathing, [231]
  • Solemn processions, [67]
  • Sore throat, gangrenous, [99], [128];
  • scarlet, [24];
  • epidemic, [30]
  • ‘Sorte-diod,’ the, [50]
  • Southwark, a great fire in, [112]
  • Spain, earthquake in, [10], [75];
  • famine in, [23];
  • leprosy in, [15], [33];
  • temperature of, [15]
  • Spaniards, cleanliness and moderation among the, [5];
  • their immunity from a pestilence, [4]
  • Spanish epidemiology, the first epoch of, [2], [198]
  • Spiders, [98], [119]
  • Spleen, gangrene of the, [162]
  • Sporadic cholera, [174]
  • Spotted fever, [75], [80], [88]
  • St. Anthony, [64];
  • St. Anthony’s fire, [39]
  • St. Fechin, [28]
  • St. Gerald, [28]
  • St. Gregory, [25];
  • St. Gregory’s ‘History of the Franks,’ ibid.
  • St. Guy, the dancing disease of, [56]
  • St. Margaret, [64]
  • St. Narcissus, [43]
  • St. Paul’s at Rome destroyed by earthquake, [29]
  • St. Sebastian, feast of, deferred, [67]
  • St. Vitus, dance of, [32];
  • Hecker’s account of, [56]
  • ———’s torrent, [81]
  • Stagnant pools and marshes, [150]
  • Starvation in London, [38]
  • Statistics of pestilence, [53];
  • of Dublin Lying-in Hospital, [226]
  • Statius, [231]
  • Stews, public, Bishop Winton on, [73]
  • Stinking mists, [86]
  • Stokes, Dr., [176]
  • Storm, severe, [118];
  • violent, [61], [76]
  • Storms, [2], [10], [11], [16], [65], [108], [120], [127], [133], [140];
  • in Judea, [23];
  • in Thuringia and Saxony, [81]
  • Stow, [43], [44], [53]
  • Strange phenomenon in the tides, [111]
  • Strasburg, dancing plague at, [63]
  • Suabia, earthquake in, [78]
  • Subterraneous thunder, [47]
  • ‘Sudor Anglicus,’ the, [70]
  • Suetonius, [17]
  • Summer, cold and wet, [32];
  • dry, [35];
  • fogs, [80];
  • hot, [18], [38], [41], [84], [86], [98], [104], [114], [137], [145], [146];
  • wet, [75]
  • Sun, eclipse of the, [37]
  • Sutton, Dr., [173]
  • Swarms of flies, [42];
  • of locusts, [46], [68], [69], [76], [81]
  • Sweating sickness, the, [70], [75], [77], [79], [80], [81], [83], [86], [114], [119]
  • Switzerland, earthquake in, [136]
  • Sydenham, [109], [161], [206]
  • Symptoms of a pestilence at Carthage, [8]
  • Syphilis at Naples, [73]
  • Syria, earthquake in, [29], [47];
  • inundation in, [34];
  • loimos in, [21]
  • ‘Tac,’ the, [61]
  • Tacitus, [16], [17], [204]
  • Tadpoles, metamorphosis of, [221]
  • Tagus, the, overflowed, [83]
  • ‘Tarantisme,’ [56]
  • Tasso, [203]
  • Temperature of Spain, [15]
  • Tempests, [98], [99];
  • violent, [30], [60]
  • Tempestuous seasons, [32];
  • weather, [44]
  • Terrific plague, a, [48]
  • Tertian epidemic, [139];
  • fever, [132];
  • fevers, epidemic, [112]
  • Thames, the, fordable, [95];
  • frozen over, [31], [33], [113];
  • high tide in the, [39], [124], [127];
  • low water in the, [34];
  • the water of the, [230]
  • Thucydides, [7], [199];
  • on epidemics, [215]
  • Thullier, Dr., [101]
  • Thunder, subterranean, [47]
  • Thunder-storms, [38], [41], [43], [46], [47], [54], [66], [105], [116], [118], [145];
  • in London, [34]
  • Tiber, the, overflowed, [83];
  • inundation of the, [30]
  • Tides, a strange phenomenon in the, [111];
  • high, [42], [124], [127]
  • ‘Tigretier,’ [56]
  • Tongue, the black, [173]
  • Topography of Egypt, [196]
  • Torrent, St. Vitus’s, [81]
  • Torrents of rain, [46]
  • Trade and locality, influence of, [179]
  • Treatment of petechial pestilence, [94];
  • of plague, [78];
  • of small-pox, [131];
  • of the venereal disease, [73]
  • ‘Trousse Galante,’ the, [80]
  • Troy, the siege of, [199]
  • ‘True pestilence,’ the, [24]
  • —— plague in France, [25]
  • Tsincheou, falling of the mountain of, [46]
  • Tully, [150]
  • Tumours in the groin or axillæ, [24]
  • Turks, cemeteries of the, [239]
  • Tyengius, [78], [81]
  • Typhoid epidemic at Mount St. Bernard, [171]
  • Typhomania, [21]
  • Typhus, [142], [146], [151], [155], [156], [173];
  • fever, [149]