Plague of Cyprian
The Plague of Cyprian was a pandemic which afflicted the Roman Empire from about AD 249 to 262,[1][2] or 251/2 to 270.[3] The plague is thought to have caused widespread manpower shortages for food production and the Roman army, severely weakening the empire during the Crisis of the Third Century.[2][4][5] Its modern name commemorates St. Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, an early Christian writer who witnessed and described the plague, in his treatise On the Plague.[2] The agent of the plague is highly speculative due to sparse sourcing, but suspects have included smallpox, measles, and viral hemorrhagic fever (filoviruses) like the Ebola virus.[1][2] The pandemic attacked everyone, "just and unjust",[6] and the response to it has strong ties to Christian beliefs and religion. Contemporary accountsThere are no accounts comprehensive enough to estimate the total number of deaths of the plague in the Roman Empire. At the height of the outbreak, 5,000 people a day were said to be dying in Rome. One historian has calculated the population of Alexandria dropped from 500,000 to 190,000 during the plague.[7] Some of the decline in the city's population was possibly due to people fleeing. Pope Dionysus the Great wrote about the plague's effects in Alexandria soon after the Decian persecution of 250 or Valerian persecutions of 257, as reported by Eusebius:
Cyprian's biographer, Pontius of Carthage, wrote of the plague at Carthage:
The plague may have stimulated the emperor Decius to revive piety to the Roman religion; on January 3, 250 he ordered everyone in the Empire to perform a sacrifice to the traditional gods and the well-being of the emperor. The Decian persecution of Christians resulted. Fifty years later, a North African convert to Christianity, Arnobius, defended his new religion from pagan allegations that neglect of the traditional gods had resulted in plague and other disasters:
Accounts of the plague date it about AD 251 to 262, however there is controversy over when this disease began. One of the first appearances of this disease relies on the contents of two letters by Bishop Dionysius of Alexandria, pointing to the plague erupting around Easter of 249 AD in Egypt, quickly spreading across Europe, and reaching Rome by the second half of 251 at the latest.[11] There was a later incident in 270 involving the death of Claudius II Gothicus, but it is unknown if this was the same plague or a different outbreak.[2] According to the Historia Augusta, "in the consulship of Antiochianus and Orfitus[12] the favour of heaven furthered Claudius' success. For a great multitude, survivors of the barbarian tribes, who had gathered in Haemimontum[13] were so stricken with famine and pestilence that Claudius now scorned to conquer them further[14]... during this same period the Scythians [Goths] attempted to plunder in Crete and Cyprus as well, but everywhere their armies were likewise stricken with pestilence and so were defeated".[15] Archaeologists that worked in Thebes, Egypt, uncovered charred human remains leading them to believe that people were burning bodies during the plague.[16] Contemporary sources indicate the plague originated in Aethiopia, but treating Aethiopia as the source of contagious diseases goes at least as far back as Thucydides' account of the Plague of Athens. That the plague reached Alexandria at least one year before it reached Rome, however, is a mark in favour of an East African origin.[17] SymptomsThere were several symptoms frequently described by contemporaries. In his treatise De mortalitate ("On the Plague") Cyprian wrote on the horrors associated with the disease, and the symptoms experienced by victims, allowing researchers to find similarities to other diseases, narrowing down the options as to what this disease may have been. The symptoms included fever, continuous vomiting, deafness, blindness, diarrhea, and swollen throat. He also wrote that victims experienced conjunctivital bleeding (filling of blood in the eyes) as well as paralysis of the legs and feet.[18] These symptoms resulted more often than not in the death of the victims. Cyprian drew moralizing analogies in his sermons to the Christian community and drew a word picture of the plague's symptoms in his essay:
EpidemiologyThere is argument over the origins of the disease. The severe devastation to the European population from the two plagues may indicate that the population had no previous exposure or immunity to the plague's cause. The historian William Hardy McNeill asserts that both the earlier Antonine Plague (166–180) and the Plague of Cyprian (251–270) were the first transfers from animal hosts to humanity of two different diseases, one of smallpox and one of measles, but not necessarily in that order. Dionysios Stathakopoulos asserts that both outbreaks were of smallpox.[20] According to the historian Kyle Harper, the symptoms attributed by ancient sources to the Plague of Cyprian better match a viral disease causing a hemorrhagic fever, such as Ebola, rather than smallpox. (Conversely, Harper believes that the Antonine Plague was caused by smallpox.)[1][2][17] Climate connectionsAccording to 2024 research, major plagues that significantly impacted the Roman Empire, such as the Antonine Plague, the Plague of Cyprian, and the Plague of Justinian, are strongly linked to periods of cooler and drier climate conditions, indicating that colder weather may have contributed to the spread of these diseases during that time. It is thought climate stress interacted with social and biological variables, such as food availability, rodent populations, and human migration, making populations more susceptible to disease.[21][22] LegacyAccording to Harper, the plague nearly saw the end of the Roman Empire, and in the period between AD 248 and 268, Roman history becomes a puzzling tangle of brutal failures. The devastation within Rome was so intense that as it overcame the populations, the emperor Trebonianus Gallus and his son gained popularity and support just for providing proper burials spaces for the plague victims, especially the poor and vulnerable.[11] The structural integrity of Rome became questionable, as the collapse invited one candidate after another to try for legitimacy over the throne. Eventually, the empire fragmented and only the immense success of later emperors in the restructuring of the empire prevented this time from being the final period of Roman imperial history.[2] The Plague of Cyprian also gives way to many Christian beliefs, as most Christians believed that they suffered because they were fighting with the devil.[23] While most people are curious by nature, this disease truly stumped the people of Rome. Cyprian urged the people to avoid fearing and wondering about the disease, and to remember that "there is hope in eternal life".[24] The bishop also said to "bring yourselves to the sick and poor, and help them. God said love thy neighbor as I have loved you."[24] As the plague originated during the times of the early Church, both the threat of imminent death from the plague and the conviction among many of the Christian clergy in the face of it won many converts to that religion.[25] The Church also promised an afterlife, a comfort to many sick and dying. Cyprian wrote of the passion of the faithful who had fallen ill in his treatise:
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