Patriarch of Pandemics

  • > The Great War destroyed the stability of a generation, and took 20 million lives

    That's an understatement. Rather two or three generations, since the Second World War is pretty much a direct consequence of how the First one ended.

  • > The 1918 pandemic, deadly as it was, is still around today in the form of a mutated seasonal flu. Following global exposure and culling of the most vulnerable populations - middle aged adults that were most affected by the negative effects of the war - the lethality of the virus is significantly less.

    OK, but was there some kind of seasonal flu before that? That is the real question to me.

  • Do babies inherit the developed immune systems of their parents? If not, how do the gained resistances from survivors pass on to the next generation?

  • If so, then over the next 100 years it has killed many more than 40M.

  • It's fantastic to me that pandemics were possible many centuries ago, though maybe the definition applied is different than to a current outbreak.

    > The outbreak of influenza reported in 1173 is not considered to be a pandemic, and other reports to 1500 generally lack reliability. The outbreak of 1510 is probably a pandemic reported with spreading from Africa to engulf Europe. The outbreak of 1557 is possibly a pandemic. The first influenza pandemic agreed by all authors occurs in 1580.

  • Following links gets you to this article which tries to explain that the Neolithic decline happened also because of a plague.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neolithic_decline

  • Very interesting how in a matter of days, the Spanish flu has been renamed to the 1918 flu. Cancel culture writ large. It’s actually impressive.