Historians will long try to identify the …

Years: 429BCE - 418BCE
Historians will long try to identify the disease behind the Plague of Athens.

The disease will traditionally be considered an outbreak of the bubonic plague in its many forms, but reconsideration of the reported symptoms and epidemiology will lead scholars to advance alternative explanations.

These include typhus, smallpox, measles, and toxic shock syndrome.

Based upon striking descriptive similarities with recent outbreaks in Africa, as well as the fact that the Athenian plague itself apparently came from Africa (as Thucydides recorded), Ebola or a related viral hemorrhagic fever will be considered.

Given the possibility that profiles of a known disease may have morphed over time or the plague was caused by a disease that no longer exists, the exact nature of the Athenian plague may never be known.

In addition, crowding caused by the influx of refugees into the city had led to inadequate food and water supplies and a probable proportionate increase in insects, lice, rats, and waste.

These conditions would have encouraged more than one epidemic disease during the outbreak.

However, advancing scientific technologies may reveal new clues.

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