During the 15th and 16th centuries in England, there were five epidemics of a disease characterized by fever and profuse sweating and associated with high mortality. This disease became known as the English sweating sickness. The first epidemic occurred during 1485 at around the time of Henry Tudor's victory at Bosworth Field, and the last took place during the reign of Edward VI in 1551. The disease tended to occur during the summer and early autumn. The relatively affluent male adult population, particularly the clergy, seemed to suffer the highest attack rates, and, except in one epidemic, the disease appears to have attacked only individuals native to England. Despite the reputation of the English sweating sickness as a disease with a h...
Since August, 1978, an epidemic characterised by respiratory symptoms and fever spread rapidly in a ...
England was the most ravaged state in all of Europe and its city, London, to be one of the most dama...
ObjectiveTo identify the major health problems of the Middle Ages. Bubonic plague is often considere...
An acute infect;ous fever, called the sweating sickness, broke out in England in five major epidemic...
The English sweating sickness caused five devastating epidemics between 1485 and 1551, England was h...
In the first episode of BBC historical drama Wolf Hall, based on Hilary Mantel’s novel of the same n...
Graduation date: 2017While historiography and interest in Tudor England at both the popular and spec...
The English Sweating Sickness in Denmark 1529The English sweating sickness (Sudor Anglicus) an epide...
Smallpox was probably the single most lethal disease in eighteenth-century Britain, but was a minor ...
Societal responses to epidemics can vary very widely, from extreme flight to apparent indifference. ...
This article offers an innovative attempt to construct an empirically-based estimate of the extent o...
The 1920–1935 epidemic of variola minor in England and Wales is a prime example of a major smallpox ...
We use individual records of 920,000 burials and 630,000 baptisms to reconstruct the spatial and tem...
Using a family reconstitution study the biology of the plague in Penrith, Cumbria in 1597/8 is descr...
Graduation date: 2008The Second Pandemic had a profound impact on the people of Europe. In the few y...
Since August, 1978, an epidemic characterised by respiratory symptoms and fever spread rapidly in a ...
England was the most ravaged state in all of Europe and its city, London, to be one of the most dama...
ObjectiveTo identify the major health problems of the Middle Ages. Bubonic plague is often considere...
An acute infect;ous fever, called the sweating sickness, broke out in England in five major epidemic...
The English sweating sickness caused five devastating epidemics between 1485 and 1551, England was h...
In the first episode of BBC historical drama Wolf Hall, based on Hilary Mantel’s novel of the same n...
Graduation date: 2017While historiography and interest in Tudor England at both the popular and spec...
The English Sweating Sickness in Denmark 1529The English sweating sickness (Sudor Anglicus) an epide...
Smallpox was probably the single most lethal disease in eighteenth-century Britain, but was a minor ...
Societal responses to epidemics can vary very widely, from extreme flight to apparent indifference. ...
This article offers an innovative attempt to construct an empirically-based estimate of the extent o...
The 1920–1935 epidemic of variola minor in England and Wales is a prime example of a major smallpox ...
We use individual records of 920,000 burials and 630,000 baptisms to reconstruct the spatial and tem...
Using a family reconstitution study the biology of the plague in Penrith, Cumbria in 1597/8 is descr...
Graduation date: 2008The Second Pandemic had a profound impact on the people of Europe. In the few y...
Since August, 1978, an epidemic characterised by respiratory symptoms and fever spread rapidly in a ...
England was the most ravaged state in all of Europe and its city, London, to be one of the most dama...
ObjectiveTo identify the major health problems of the Middle Ages. Bubonic plague is often considere...