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Sounds like a bad influenza maybe.
It's entirely possible that several diseases were running riot at the same time.They said " herbs that are used to cure poisons were drunk and helped a good many. " but realistically, there are no herbs that reliably treat poisoning, so you can't draw any conclusion from that.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/01/2018 10:34:26It's entirely possible that several diseases were running riot at the same time.They said " herbs that are used to cure poisons were drunk and helped a good many. " but realistically, there are no herbs that reliably treat poisoning, so you can't draw any conclusion from that.I don't know what herbs exactly were used there, but usually it were:Hypericum (activator of CYP-enzimes), Melissa officinalis (anti-spastic), Chamaemelon romana, Achilléa, Plantago (Anti-hemorrhagic and antiseptic), Inula (antiseptic and analgetic).
[quote author=YarSmirnov So, what they are saying is " a bunch of herbs that were marginal in terms of treating toxicity were also marginal in therms of this plague".You can't read a lot into that in terms of diagnosis.
If they had said "there was a plague of aching swollen feet, and Autumn Crocus did wonders for it then it would be reasonable to deduce that they might have had a plague of gout. but the talk of "herbs" is just too non-specific.
I think, we can read it as argument "contra" for versions of the Justinian Plague and Anthrax.
I don't (though I don't think it was anthrax)
If the herbs really do little or nothing for the conditions they are "prescribed" for, but people think they do then those same people will think the herbs helped whatever the plague is- whether they help or not.At the risk of starting an entirely different argument, it's like saying"We offered the prayers we use for poisoning, and the patients got better so it must have been poison".
There's little support for most herbs as a remedy for anything and as far as I understand it, no reason to think belladonna will help you if you eat death caps.
But the idea of a plant that's "generally good against poisons" doesn't make much sense- not even via activation of the cytochrome enzymes because those tend to be activated by most poisons anyway.
Unfortunately, I don't think the written records from the time are going to tell us what this contagion was.
Quote from: wolfekeeper on 14/01/2018 04:59:08Sounds like a bad influenza maybe.Influenza at August?
Actually, yes, although northern countries like Europe or southern countries like Australia have flu seasons which correspond to winter, in the tropics, where they don't really have winter, flu tends to circulate year around.
So alas! You can't escape flu by simply going somewhere hot and sunny!
Incidentally, i shouldn't necessarily get too hung up about the 'herbs were given'. It's fantastically unlikely that they did proper double blind tests and it's easy to get false positives on thinking something worked.
But we can escape flu with low density of population and it's low mobility. As it was in Medieval times.
There are no need in proper double blind test in case of highly effective or highly ineffective treatment.
Trying to work out what that pathogen was on the basis of looking at what ineffectual treatments were given to the lucky ones whose immune system actually killed the bug is just not science.
That's why you can't buy homeopathic treatments in any pharmacy, and people don't swear by accupuncture, reflexology, and why leaches or bleeding was never used in medieval times for entirely inappropriate conditions.