The plague had retreated from Europe in …

Years: 1684 - 1827
The plague had retreated from Europe in the late seventeenth century, making a last appearance in Northern Germany in 1682 and vanishing from the continent in 1684.

The subsequent wave hitting Europe during the Great Northern War most probably had its origins in Central Asia, spreading to Europe via Anatolia and Constantinople in the Ottoman Empire.

Georg Sticker will number this epidemic as the "twelfth period" of plague epidemics, first recorded in Ahmedabad in 1683 and until 1724 affecting a territory from India over Persia, Asia Minor, the Levant and Egypt to Nubia and Ethiopia as well as to Morocco and southern France on the one hand and to East Central Europe up to Scandinavia on the other hand. (Sticker, Georg (1908). Die Pest. Abhandlungen aus der Seuchengeschichte und Seuchenlehre. 1. Gießen: A. Töpelmann (vormals J. Ricker).

Constantinople is reached in 1685 and will remain a site of infection for the subsequent years.

Sporadically, the plague enters Poland–Lithuania from 1697, yet the wave of the plague that meets and follows the armies of the Great Northern War is first recorded in Poland in 1702.

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