The Antonine Plague, which struck Rome in 165 AD when Roman legions returned from Mesopotamia, was the first recorded pandemic in Western history, killing an estimated 5-10 million people (up to a quarter of those infected) and marking the beginning of Rome's long decline by devastating its economy, army, and confidence, yet no one in ancient Europe had a word for 'pandemic' or understood germ theory, believing instead that the disease was punishment from the gods.
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The Plague With No Name 😱 | Rome’s Hidden TragedyAjouté :
2,000 years ago, something crept out of the ancient east. Silent, invisible, and utterly unstoppable. It had no name, no cure. And by the time Rome understood what was happening, millions were already dead. The year was 165 AD. Roman legions were returning victorious from Mesopotamia. And they brought something back with them. Soldiers began falling sick. fever, pestules covering the body, relentless diarrhea. It spread through the camps like wildfire. The legions marched home and carried death into the heart of the empire. Within months, 2,000 Romans were dying every single day. Physicians were baffled. The great Galen of Pergamon, Rome's finest doctor, described the symptoms in horrifying detail, then fled the city. The disease struck emperors and slaves alike. Marcus Aurelius himself would eventually fall to its relentless grip. At its peak, the Antonine plague killed up to a quarter of everyone it infected. Entire villages emptied overnight. Trade routes, Rome's greatest strength, became highways of death, carrying the plague from Britain to Persia. The Roman army, once invincible, collapsed in strength.
Border defenses crumbled. Germanic tribes seized the moment. Historians now believe this was smallox, the first recorded pandemic in Western history. 5 million dead. Some estimates reach 10 million. The Roman Empire would never fully recover its former glory. The plague fractured the empire's economy, its army, its confidence. Some scholars mark it as the beginning of Rome's long decline. And yet no one in Europe even had a word for it. No concept of pandemic, no germ theory, just gods and punishment and fear. The Antonine plague reshaped the ancient world and most people have never heard its
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