Justinian Plague

  • 540

    Origin

     Origin
    The epidemic originated in Ethiopia in Africa and spread to Pelusium in Egypt in 540. It then spread west to Alexandria and east to Gaza, Jerusalem and Antioch, then was carried on ships on the sea trading routes to both sides of the Mediterranean, arriving in Constantinople (now Istanbul) in the autumn of 541.
  • Period: 540 to 546

    Justinian Plague

  • 541

    Justinian Plague

    Justinian Plague
    The first great pandemic of bubonic plague where people were recorded as suffering from the characteristic buboes and septicaemia was the Justinian Plague of 541 CE, named after Justinian I, the Roman emperor of the Byzantine Empire at the time.
  • 542

    Effects

    Effects
    The most important examination of the effects of the plague comes from a passage from Procopius in which he writes: “At that time it was not easy to see anyone in Byzantium out of doors; all those who were in health sat at home either tending to the sick or mourning the dead. If one did manage to see a man actually going out, he would be burying one of the dead.
  • 542

    5000 deaths daily

     5000 deaths daily
    The focus of the Justinian pandemic was Constantinople, reaching a peak in the spring of 542 with 5,000 deaths per day in the city, although some estimates vary to 10,000 per day, and it went on to kill over a third of the city’s population. Victims were too numerous to be buried and were stacked high in the city’s churches and city wall towers, their Christian doctrine preventing their disposal by cremation.
  • 544

    Effects..

    Effects..
    The territorial empire created by Justinian barely outlasted him, and his dreams of reconquest were never fully realized. The plague had an immediate effect on both the economy and military capabilities of the Byzantine Empire. While eventually the empire was able to recover from the plague and claim more land than before, the plague kept it from achieving greater glory.
  • 546

    100 million deaths

    100 million deaths
    Over the next three years plague raged through Italy, southern France, the Rhine valley and Iberia. The disease spread as far north as Denmark and west to Ireland, then further to Africa, the Middle East and Asia Minor. Between the years 542 and 546 epidemics in Asia, Africa and Europe killed nearly 100 million people.
  • 546

    Major Outbreaks

    Major Outbreaks
    Further major outbreaks occurred throughout Europe and the Middle East over the next 200 years – in Constantinople in the years 573, 600, 698 and 747. The plague continued in intermittent cycles in Europe into the mid-8th century and did not re-emerge as a major epidemic until the 14th century.