Plague of 664 explained

The plague of 664 was an epidemic that affected Great Britain and Ireland in 664 AD, during the first recorded plague pandemic. It was the first recorded epidemic in English history, and coincided with a solar eclipse.[1] It was considered by later sources as "The Yellow Plague of 664" and said to have lasted for twenty or twenty-five years, causing widespread mortality, social disruption and abandonment of religious faith. The disease responsible was probably Plague – part of the First Plague Pandemic – or else smallpox.

According to the Irish Annals of Tigernach, the plague was preceded by a solar eclipse on 1 May 664 (the path of the total eclipse on 1 May 664 started in the Pacific, crossed the Gulf of Mexico, swept along the eastern coast of North America crossed the British Isles and continued on into Central Europe[2]). Bede also mentioned the eclipse but wrongly placed it on 3 May. The Irish sources claimed that there was also an earthquake in Britain and that the plague reached Ireland first at Mag Nitha, among the Fothairt in Leinster. Bede claimed that the plague first was in the south of Britain and then spread to the north.

Bede wrote: According to Adomnan of Iona, a contemporary Irish abbot and saint, the plague affected everywhere in the British Isles except for a large area in modern Scotland. Adomnan considered the plague a divine punishment for sins, and he believed that the Picts and Irish who lived in northern Great Britain were spared from the plague due to the intercession of Saint Columba who had founded monasteries among them. Adomnan personally walked among victims of the plague and claimed that neither he nor his companions became sick.[3] [4] The plague led a great number of people back to paganism, while at the same time disorganizing the social and political atmosphere.[5]

The disease reached Ireland on 1 August 664.[6] Both Ireland and Great Britain were equally effected. Although the little written evidence that survived was written by the English.[7] Two specific accounts remain of the disease. Cuthbert, an Irish monk, was reportedly, "seized stricken down with a plague which at that time carried off very many throughout the length and breadth of Britain". A possible groin bubo also grew on Cuthbert's thigh. The wife of King Ecgfrith, Enfleda, died with a tumor that released a "noxious moisture", another possible instance of the Black Plague in Ireland.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kohn, George C.. Encyclopedia of Plague and Pestilence: From Ancient Times to the Present. 2007. Infobase Publishing. 978-1-4381-2923-5. 449. en. Yellow Plague of 664.
  2. https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsearch/SEsearchmap.php?Ecl=06640501 NASA.gov
  3. Adomnan of Iona. Life of St Columba. Penguin Books, 1995
  4. http://past.oxfordjournals.org/content/156/1/7.extract Plague in Seventh Century England
  5. January 1957 . The Bubonic Plague and England: An Essay in the History of Preventive Medicine. By Charles F. Mullett (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press. 1956. Pp. vii, 401. $9.00.) . The American Historical Review . 10.1086/ahr/62.2.382 . 1937-5239.
  6. Pierce A. Grace . 2018 . From blefed to scamach: pestilence in early medieval Ireland . Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: Archaeology, Culture, History, Literature . 118C . 67 . 10.3318/priac.2018.118.04.
  7. MacArthur . William P. . March 1949 . The identification of some pestilences recorded in the Irish Annals . Irish Historical Studies . 6 . 21 . 169–188 . 10.1017/s0021121400028078 . 0021-1214.