I really like this history channel. there's no flashy graphics but the sets more than make up for it. and it has more of a oral history vibe it's quite unique and very nice.
I went to the village of Eyam a few years ago, ive been to their plague stone, whats even more interesting is they recorded that payment for goods was given, with coins that had been washed with vinegar, even then, they knew vinegar could stop infection, even if they didnt know why.
It's why, as a sports medicinal docter, chriopracter, and bio chemist, as well as a practioner of other things, I find value and mixing and teaching old and new methods. West and East were very deeply connected with each other before 1433( early ming and continued through the Qing dynasty). Chinese revolution failed to destroy most of it anyway(the people who got away ran to deep mountain or plains based village communities, red army stayed in ,& around major cities/towns), so I figured, why not? Just be careful, most chinese are very shady or delisional/dumb(Be sure to speak/speak mandarin, and be aware of what's what).
The personal stories that come out of these times are so fascinating to me. Your ability to turn history into a human experience is unmatched, thanks Kevin.
@@georgedonnellan36 I have an English Bulldog. Moose. After Bear Baiting was outlawed in Britain. The breed was dying out. As they were bred specifically for the cruel spectacle. Americans who were enamoured of them started breeding them. That’s how we end up with EBDs that look like they do in the cartoons. Ironically they are the MOST gentle creatures I’ve ever met. It makes one so sad to think of the thousands with such cruel lives. PS. Kevin has met Moose. We in Saskatchewan are lucky to have the man. The legend. Living in our province. ❤️ th-cam.com/video/ljx9xrw9uxA/w-d-xo.html
Bit of trivia: there's 3 forms of plague: Bubonic, with a fatality rate of roughly 50%, Septicemic with a fatality rate around 75% and Pneumonic with a fatality rate approaching 100%. The fact that there are at least 3 different recognized strains could explain some of the differences witnessed historically about how the disease spread and how _anyone_ managed to survive.
Sorry, these stats are actually very incorrect. I did a university essay on the Black Death and had to read extensively on this issue. Septicaemic plague was the rarest form, and only made up for approximately 1-5% of cases if that, but was almost always fatal. Surviving this was about 997/1000 people dead. Pneumonic plague was safer than septicaemic, but only slightly. Roughly 90-95% mortality rate, but the issue is, this was the most widely spread via human to human, as it was in the aerosols coughed up by the sick that would infect everyone around them. As Kevin said in the video, this is the "breath of death" plague. Bubonic plague would kill 4 in every 5 people in about 6-8 days. It was very, very deadly as well, but not as deadly as the pneumonic or septicaemic. Many people, however, with bubonic and pneumonic plague would go on to develop septicaemic plague, where it infected their blood as the disease progressed, which killed them always.
@hikelfin5941 , sorry about that. I was going purely from memory from when I covered it in college. It's been about 15 years now 😝. I do appreciate the more accurate information though. I do have something interesting you might not know though: bubonic plague is endemic to the United States (primarily the southwest) carried by deer mice and prairie dogs. Apparently this causes issues on native American reservations where it's not uncommon to keep prairie dogs as pets.
@@hikelfin5941 , that would be quite a revelation to a LOT of people I assure you. The average person has no idea the bubonic plague is still running around in living (albeit animal) populations today.
You’re a great storyteller. Since we’re not being bombarded with dramatic images (which is so common with ai) we can truly focus on your words and the imagination runs wild. It might sound kind of lame but when you were describing the village in the final story under quarantine I could see it in my imagination, the plague stone, the lovers, all of it. Well done sir.
A Journal of the Plague Year was the best book I read in 2020. All of the human behavior in that book matched perfectly with the insanity happening all around me during the pandemic. It brought me some solace, knowing that we had survived worse.
I always think of Ingmar Bergman’s famous film “The Seventh Seal” where a Swedish knight returning home from the crusades in 1348 during the first wave of the Black Death and encounters Death and duels with him for his life. Such a great film!
Looking at the black death from an economic perspective, at least from what we were taught, is that the Black Death was one of the factors that allowed humans to escape the Malthusian Trap and pave the wave for population growth. There weren't enough people to tend to the fertile lands, so they were paid more, providing more income but better crop yields due to the fertile land.
For a few years, *some* farmers were paid more, briefly. And then in the long term, *all* farmers were paid more, permanently. But in between, there were a few generations where the landowners (being feudal lords) simply responded to the peasants' demands for more pay by making it illegal to ask, and then punishing them when they asked anyway. In English history, for instance, you're looking at the "Statute of Laborers" from 1351. Also, remember that a small labor pool is a two-edged sword: if you can charge more for your goods and services, so can all the other survivors. Inflation becomes a problem.
It’s also where Surnames (Last names) mainly originated from. Before a person would rarely if ever leave their village so if you were named George and the only George in town that was good enough. Afterwards they needed another name to differentiate between people so last names became either the town you came from or a lot of the times what your profession was. Smith, Taylor, Farmer etc. My last name comes from son of a rope maker and my family crest has three hemp rakes on it because hemp was used for ropes and cordage.
@@Koutsimoukagood question. I’ve often thought about origins of second names. Mine is McGuirk. Id love to know what it means, or if actually even means anything
I was always under the impression when bubonic plague turns into pneumonic plague, that is when the plague becomes airborn. It also becomes twice as deadly when it makes that transition.
Kevin, My daddy told me about the “Pest” house of the early 1900’s in West Virginia, USA. He was just a child then & he said that there was a stone where the provisions for the unfortunate souls in the pest house were housed. I had never thought of this until I heard of it on the Historysquad. I feel as if you’ve shared volumes of gems from the past. I feel as if I’m time traveling on a great adventure each time I watch you! Thanks so much.
It's incredible how people back then were able to figure things out such as an incubation period with the plague or some seemingly impossible task at the time like discovering planets in the solar system. Just incredible, those lads
Hi, Kevin Hicks! Love your videos. One small correction? The Yersinia pestis is not the flea. It is the bacteria carried by the fleas that can live on rats, amongst other mammals. Yes, the rats might not be able to travel by themselves so fast. But, when they stowaway on ships, they can travel far and fast. Also, the fleas that carry the Yersinia pestis bacteria can transfer to one human to another human. The fleas might also get wrapped up in a rug and then, when that rug arrives at the destination and is shaken out the fleas and any waste they have made might be flung into the air. I live in New Mexico, USA where the Bubonic Plague still exists. We like to say we are "The Land of the Flea and the Home of the Plague." When it first comes on, it can resemble the flu. But, if your doctor is informed you have been here, they can check for it and save your life. I know a man who's had it twice! A New York couple visited here a few years back and went home then felt like they had the flu. The New York City doctors were puzzled. As soon as the news got back here, a doctor was able to get the right stuff to NYC to save them. Please keep making your excellent videos!
I was reading an article about the plague in the USA in which it said that there's around seven cases a year! There were pictures of a man who'd camped in a National Park, (in California if I remember correctly), near a ground squirrel burrow in which the squirrel had died. The fleas seemed to be a tad peckish and fed on the camper. He developed the infection which led to septicaemic plague and the loss of his nose and fingers. I believe that in 2022 a squirrel in Colorado was found to be carrying plague. I wonder if this represents a spread to previously plague free areas? I hope that this is of some interest to you.
That's correct. The plague also still exists in India where there are several cases every year. In the South Western US it's mainly wildlife that carries the plague, and that can spread to humans.
Don't prairie dogs also carry it, or the flea that carries it? Thought I had read that a few years ago when an older couple, visiting NY from Arizona passed away from it. ...Hi all from SW Oklahoma
This is fantastic quality, as usual. Every video is better content than documentaries on state television, and it's just one man, dedicated to telling history. Glad I found this channel.
I am always happy to see a new video from you, I find them very well made and informative and sometimes fun, in my opinion your channel is the best ones that there is, when it comes to this time of period in history. Thank you for uploading another one video!
That was totally absorbing and absolutely fascinating. Brilliantly presented too, by a natural, effortless teacher. Kevin Hicks should have his own TV show! BBC give this man a series!!!
This is a frightening plague. I'm intrigued by this revisionist history of its beginnings. "You must always keep an open mind when it comes to history." Excellent quote from you. I personally am always open to have my opinion affected as new information comes along from a reliable and verifiable source. I love trekking through history with you. Thanks, Kevin, for another great journey.
Hello! Love these videos. I'm a nurse and completed a project on yersinia pestis during my pre-requisite studies. While rats are most commonly associated with the plague, anything which may carry fleas can be a vector for the bacteria. I wonder what that would have been in Iceland? Pneumonic form certainly existed as well.
Thanks, Kevin. I knew that the plague, and the Black Death started with the fleas from the rats, but then quickly spread from person to person. I can't even begin to really imagine living with this for so long, and of course, there was not really any other idea of how to treat it other than the isolation of victims via quarantine. I really wish that history teachers could have had the enthusiasm for the story that you do, and I hope that history stays important to coming generations. Cheers from Texas.
Most enjoyable. Reminds me of our gd 9 history teacher here in Canada, Stanley Etchells. In those days gd 9 centred on British history. Mr. Etchells served with the British 8th Army in Italy; he taught us Morse Code at lunch time. In those days, all of the boys in my school were members of Army Cadet and learned to play with Bren Guns, first aid and signals. I even wore hob-nailed boots. Mr. Etchells described that when he was learning about the Black Death the teacher took them to the basement, removed a few bricks and started slipping our bones. The school was built on a burial pit. I'm not sure where Mr Etchell's school was located, but I recall his hillarious rendition of working at a "loom" in his dad's textile factory.
I've just discovered your channel, and while I've always loved history, you have a certain way of telling stories that makes this very interesting without needing to have fake videos or repetitive sliding images. I appreciate the effort you put into it, and can't wait to see your new content! Cheers
This gentleman, in my opinion, is one of the most entertaining characters on the internet. His quiet humour and informative storytelling is a pleasant escape from the usual cacaphony of unsettling bullcrap that is the majority of the internet today. As a former soldier and policeman, tough callings to be sure, it's a measure of his honest and gentle character that he has retained such humour and optimism. I'm quite happy that he chose my country to settle in his golden years. We are much richer for it. 🇨🇦
KEVIN, you remind me of my old History teacher from many many years ago. Dennis Humphries was his name. He not only taught but he took you with him on a journey every lesson. To this day history is my favourite subject, Thanks very much Sir
I was actually aware of the near constant status of plague-stricken regions that the sickness periodically showed up in over hundreds of years during the high middle ages in Europe. I really enjoyed this video. Thanks Doctor Hicks 😎. Awaiting your next upload as always!
Wow, this video was incredibly well-crafted! Kevin Hicks delves into the depths of the Black Death with such compelling storytelling and a captivating narrative that I could listen to him all day. The way he explores and unravels the complexities surrounding the deadliest plague in human history is absolutely immersive. It’s fascinating how he sheds new light on the conventional beliefs about the Bubonic Plague, challenging the long-held notion that rats or the fleas they carried were the primary culprits. The discussion about the bacterium Yersinia pestis and the intriguing examination of historical cures add rich layers to our understanding. Kevin’s ability to humanise the sheer scale of this tragedy through personal stories is truly remarkable. Medical history is fascinating, and I wish this content were part of the medical curriculum. Please do more videos on medical history. Great job on this enlightening and engaging video! Thank you ❤
I visited Eyam only a few days ago, a fascinating and tragic story. The church is beautiful, but its a bit of a hike up to Mompesson's well where I believe they dropped supplies off to the isolating village.
I was always under the impression that Yesenia pestis was the name of the bacteria that fleas carry. Which commonly infect rodents. Although it can infect all mammals. And the different types of plagues are spread by different ways the bacteria can infect you. Such as coughing can spread it if the bacteria has incubated in your lungs rather than your blood. Which is how a flee would infect you. In the US in the southwest such as NM and AZ there are still reported plague cases from people camping but common antibiotics can cure it. The bacteria isn't only local to Asia.
Thanks Kevin, fascinating. The plague arrived in Eyam (pronounced eem) late August 1665. It came in a parcel of cloth sent from London to the village tailor Alexander Hadfield. When Hadfield’s assistant George Viccars spread the cloth out by the fire to air, he found it was infested with rat fleas. He died a few days later.
I put this vid on and it took 3 mins and my grandson was listening halfway through he had taken over my seat and by the end of it he was eagerly wanting to discuss this one with me, thank you from a nanna Knight in Australia for the quality time with a grandson.
There is some speculation that the Bubonic Plague of the time spread more like a modern Pneumonic Plague. This strain has, thank God, died out. Fingers crossed never to return. A long incubation in the victim is a nightmare disease to control and could explain why it spread so far in a society with transportation modes far slower than today.
This isn't speculation, this is what happened. The bubonic plague spread from fleas on rats to humans, where it morphed in to the pneumonic plague when it was spread from human to human. I didn't think this was controversial.
Excellent points and fascinating video Unfortunately, IIRC the sylvan plague that lurks in the (western) American wilds has a propensity to go pneumonic; I've heard of several fatalities from this (also it has the horrifying habit of becoming septicemic plague) . One gentleman miraculously survived after being in a coma from septicemic plague that he contracted when he tried to save a stray kitten that was infected (it apparently coughed on him but strangely enough, he developed septicemic rather than pneumonic). The guy lost all his fingers and his nose IIRC. Another gentleman unfortunately perished when he developed pneumonic plague from a bobcat that he had skinned; IIRC epidemiologists believe he actually contracted plague from a flea on the bobcat (he hadn't let it hang and get cold long enough for the fleas to depart), but his infection "went pneumonic" soon after he was bitten
I recently discovered your channel and love how you tell stories. I have a small correction for you though. Yersinia pestis is the name of the bacteria suspected of causing plague, not the flea. The flea's species is Xenopsylla cheopis. Yersinia is still around and seen in veterinary medicine (one of several factors affecting the endangered black-footed ferret in the US) and in people, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, but also in the Americas as well.
What's crazy is people are still catching the plague. It's nowhere near the same severity as the "Black Death", however it is still out there. In my state of California, a few years ago now there was a big story about a man catching the plague, the first time in 5 years. In that same year 5 people had gotten it, from California to Colorado to New Mexico. Absolutely crazy.
I used to have pet domestic rats ( very different than wild rats, cute and gentle) and occasionally some idiot would get hysterical and start yelling about how I would get plague. I patently would try to explain it was the fleas and my rats didn't have fleas. Thank you for going into this.
What an great show! Such a amazing amount of facts and information to enlighten and also dispel long held beliefs of how the plagur started. Thank you for sharing your wealth of research!
I LOVE history. Thank you for your research and the courage to make this channel. Good for you and good for me that I found you. I'm Canadian with British/Irish/Welsh heritage. I can't get enough of the history. Keep bring these awesome stories.❤❤❤
I think this is the second video I've seen that referenced that source. The other one focused pretty much exclusively on the quarantine aspect, so this broader focus is interesting. Thank you, Kevin!
The inventiveness and work Kevin puts into his props and his interesting presentations make this one of the best history channels. Always informative and interesting, they're all such a pleasure to watch n rewatch.
I am a history enthusiast. And my love of history deepen even more and more when I watch your videos with your extraordinary british accent and learn unique words thanks to your rich lexicon.
Hey new subscriber here and currently pouring through all your videos. It's great to see someone so enthusiastic about history and who can tell the stories so well.
Well, apparently my pocket left that little gem of a comment without my authorization, so I just wanted to revise it to say this is one of my favorite channels on TH-cam within the realm of historical study and such. Stumbled on the channel via the tour of Goodrich castle. If I may just put forward a fan request, without any attached pressure or anything, if it’s possible, Kev, might you be willing to do more videos of a similar nature to that? I love your usual content as well, there’s no problems whatsoever there, but I just love the way you present the history and focus on what I consider to be many of the most interesting details, relevant anecdotes, and other pertinent tidbits of knowledge and information. Most other channels just do a very basic “walkthrough,” most of the time without even a basic or cursory history included, and often no verbal input or information at all. It can be super frustrating when the camera pans past some rare, unique, or otherwise interesting feature of some fortress or another, and just moves right on along without even a second look. I’ve seen some people just waltz right past intriguing passages, unique architectural or defensive features, and the like, without so much as a passing comment, let alone a useful description or relevant anecdote. The History Squad doesn’t mess around with such nonsense, and I love it. =] I know you can’t be going to a different castle every week or anything, but if you have the opportunity, I’m sure I’m lot the only one who would be very excited to see such content from you. I’m not sure if you even still live in the UK, which would make that rather difficult if not, but I figured I’d throw it out there. Thanks for what you do!
I remember years back when they finally came out with what the difference between the 2 plagues were but I can't remember for the life of me what they called the 2 but one of them was caused by the rats & fleas but I believe the other one was bacterial or viral but I can't remember which one it was or what they named it as. I loved your presentation for this episode. You truly have the great gift & talent for historical presentations. I'm a long time history buff that will be 70 this month & who loved history my whole life. I wish all of our history teachers here had such gifts that would get the kids jazzed up about history. I also wish our history teachers were aloud to tell the truth about our history's wrong doings as well as our accomplishments but that takes honesty about our history's wrong doings. This quote is so true>"If we forget our history, we are doomed to repeat our mistakes", which I would add "our misdeeds" as well as mistakes because we have a lot of misdeeds that weren't mistakes but outright lies to cover up our misdeeds throughout our history. Keep up the good work you're doing. 😊 I ❤ all things history lol.
This was a challenging video for me to watch. I love history, and I find historical diseases fascinating. But the sheer scale of pain and horror that people endured...it keeps me awake at night. Thanks for the engaging presentation, Mr. Hicks, and for those *hilarious* chicken moments.
I think as a child most people are told spit facts that the black death was spread by rats, I certainly know in the 90's that's what I was taught (from memory it was after we all did the nursery rhyme about it one day) but as we learn, rats just can't move as fast as the black death spread, only humans could accomplish it. Amazing to me that even though (to my knowledge) they still operated on "the four humors" in that period, that some people still had the ability to examine practically and came to the conclusion it was spread from person to person by actual contact. We truly do not give previous generations enough credit at times. I still find it fascinating that we have been using honey for thousands of years medicinally. The story about the guy not hearing from his betrothed truly was one of millions of sad deaths I imagine. Definately makes one grateful for all our advancements and understandings about hygiene and disease. Wonderful video once again!
Interesting talk on the plague, brought it home a bit as I live in Penrith. There are a number of houses from that period still here and lived in. Imagine what those houses saw. We also have a plague stone here. Thanks Kevin.
As a trained AnE nurse I was astounded by the fact that our ports were kept open during Covid. With 100, 000 people arriving through Heathrow Airport in such a short space of time, a mere few hours, we were exposed to Covid very quickly. Commerce and Greed took the place of commons sense...😮😮
I live in Auckland, pretty much the economic powerhouse of New Zealand. We were very lucky with our government and the lockdowns but there were opponents and subversives who made very unexpected allies. I can see how the slow spread would happen even if the vast majority of the population with modern education did what they were supposed to.
COVID is a perfect example of how fear takes place of common sense. COVID was out and about long before we even knew about its existence. The lockdowns did nothing to prevent its spread, but caused enormous damage to the physical and mental health of people, especially children and adolescents, and in addition caused serious economic damage.
All evidence suggest l**kdowns were not an effective measure proportionate to the risk we ever faced from C*vid. It was ever a fraction as dangerous as the plague. Then add all the missed cancer diagnoses, etc. The biggest public health mistake in history.
Yes. Common sense. Over sickness with a 99.97% survival rate. Yes, closing your ports would have stopped goods from coming in. SO Yeha common sense... Something you don"t have huh
Very interesting Kev, I always thought it was just the fleas and rats, not from person to person. Makes sense if you think about it but I was taught the same. Thank you Dr Kev.
As people lived in crowded port cities, and kept animals indoors, still see that fleas and sick people could both spread the disease. But you have done another fantastic job making history come alive. The cures sound more terrifying than the disease.😮
Love you're historical storytelling style! Especially you're videos touring medieval castles lol I've never seen one in person as I live in the US but through you're videos it makes me feel like I'm right there!
I really love this channel and this a hyper specific request, but some of my favorite channels have started releasing the audio of their videos on Spotify and I would love if you started to do that because I like listening to your videos as I go to sleep. Don't know how difficult the process is, but if you follow through I will most definitely support your patreon. I grew up going to Warwick castle everytime I visited my family in England as a kid and was obsessed with knights. As an American this is not super common and I wonder if you had a part to play in that early obsession. Your videos have shown me that I still have that same love for medieval history and all that stories that accompany them. Don't worry about the request if it is too much of a bother, but I feel that not having your voice and storytelling in audio form would be a shame because I think many would benefit from hearing your voice while driving, hiking, or in my strange case sleeping.
Hi Mike, that's really interesting, we've actually begun to think about creating podcasts already, Julie just needs to get her head around it and look at the process, how it works and how it would grow etc., but your comment has spurred us on to maybe look a bit harder now. Bear with us, but if we do, we'll announce it here on a community post and on Facebook. Thanks for your interest and kind words. Kevin 👍🏻
Kevin, you had me in pieces with the chicken! 😂 Another thoroughly engaging talk where I learned something new from you, yet again. Thank you for all of the work you and your team put into these videos. Truly excellent. 👍👏
Wow. Absolutely fascinating. So much of what I thought I knew about the plague has, as you said in the beginning, been flipped on its head! Wonderful video Kevin, you’ve earned yourself a new subscriber!
I think you might have misunderstood some things Kevin, Yersinia pestis is a bacteria, not the flea itself ;) the flea carried these bacteria and transmitted them by biting but it could also be transmitted from person to person by spit drops when contagious. So you have 2 forms of plague. From flea bites and the longue plague which was transmitted by couching.
I love that you have a plague mask just laying around to make this video because of course you would. Kevin you are the best history presenter on TH-cam hands down.
Very interesting video as per usual. The cause of the Black Death was definitely caused be the Yersinia pestis bacterium, which has been proven by DNA analysis of remains. Transmission is most likely a combination of the rat flea AND human to human contact, I.e not solely one method. Plaque rates reduced significantly during winter, where rats are less active. Also rat fleas will bite humans and other mammals when their normal host animal dies. Humans lived in much closer proximity to animals in urban areas then than today. Another important factor is that the Yersinia pestis bacterium can be present in flea excrement. The bacterium can thus be spread via the air. Add to that human to human contagion, trade routes carrying rats , and dormant fleas resulted in the perfect cocktail.
Great Channel!!! I've heard there are still several thousand cases of it in more rural areas in around the globe each year, I think the US report 350-400 cases each year, which is creepy in and of itself. I thought it was all bacterial, I wasn't aware the scientists were still trying to track down exactly what it is.
You are one of my favorite historical narrators. (Also thank you for a delightfully casual representation of Vitiligo! I've hesitated to mention it, but representation matters.)
Bless you Kevin me and my partner visited eam in Derbyshire its a wonderful visit the plague cottages are occupied now and i would imagine things would go bump in the night for sure .. can i say your the most informative most interesting historian I've ever seen with your knowledge and costumes I feel like I've been transported back its almost as if your telling the facts and the information like you've been there and whittnesed it with your own eyes it truly fantastic please don't ever stop making these take care Kevin . Paul cheadle Stockport
Another great one, Kev! I coulda swore you were about to say smallpox, but no. The good ol' bubonic. Interesting to learn that there's still an abiding mystery about it.
I'm really enjoying your videos, you're a great storyteller, 👍 👌. I saw a program on TV some time ago, I'm pretty sure it was about this, and the hypothesis was that it was spread by human body lice which also infested the clothes, so when they died and their clothes were passed on to another person, they too got infected. After a while, all the clothes were burned.
I really like this history channel. there's no flashy graphics but the sets more than make up for it. and it has more of a oral history vibe it's quite unique and very nice.
I love it too 💕
Cheers corp 👍🏻
Don´t forget Kevin´s models! 😊
Same here mate and Kevin alone really brings things to life.
@@thehistorysquadlow key asmr ngl
I'm loving this channel. No bad acting or unfunny jokes. Just interesting history.
Thanks!
Poor Horrible Histories 😂, calling them out like that aha.
"OH me chicken's dead." I can't stop laughing at the chicken!
😜
OMG...that squawking chicken just killed me, lol. 😂. "SQUEEEEEEEEEE!"
@@unhiddenhistory Not as much as it killed the chicken hahaaa The sounds were so perfectly timed 🐔🤣
An eggstraspecial comment.
@@MichaelLevine-n6y Stop lol! 😆
I went to the village of Eyam a few years ago, ive been to their plague stone, whats even more interesting is they recorded that payment for goods was given, with coins that had been washed with vinegar, even then, they knew vinegar could stop infection, even if they didnt know why.
they had to use trial & error to find what worked. Unfortunatly, vinegar doesn't work in bodies, since virus live in veins
Isn’t that the one on Dorset or is that another one?
@Bambi-em6vm naa, its in Derbyshire! Its a lovely place to hike too, well worth a day trip
It's why, as a sports medicinal docter, chriopracter, and bio chemist, as well as a practioner of other things, I find value and mixing and teaching old and new methods. West and East were very deeply connected with each other before 1433( early ming and continued through the Qing dynasty). Chinese revolution failed to destroy most of it anyway(the people who got away ran to deep mountain or plains based village communities, red army stayed in ,& around major cities/towns), so I figured, why not? Just be careful, most chinese are very shady or delisional/dumb(Be sure to speak/speak mandarin, and be aware of what's what).
You are such an amazing history storyteller. I appreciate your clear communication and the enthralling spirit you give to each post.
Thanks!
The personal stories that come out of these times are so fascinating to me. Your ability to turn history into a human experience is unmatched, thanks Kevin.
That's so kind of you, thanks. 👍🏻
Hear Hear!!
Samuel pepys described bear bating, how horrendous, and God sat back with folded arms, and watched it all??😢
@@georgedonnellan36
I have an English Bulldog. Moose.
After Bear Baiting was outlawed in Britain. The breed was dying out. As they were bred specifically for the cruel spectacle.
Americans who were enamoured of them started breeding them.
That’s how we end up with EBDs that look like they do in the cartoons.
Ironically they are the MOST gentle creatures I’ve ever met.
It makes one so sad to think of the thousands with such cruel lives.
PS. Kevin has met Moose.
We in Saskatchewan are lucky to have the man. The legend. Living in our province. ❤️
th-cam.com/video/ljx9xrw9uxA/w-d-xo.html
Bit of trivia: there's 3 forms of plague: Bubonic, with a fatality rate of roughly 50%, Septicemic with a fatality rate around 75% and Pneumonic with a fatality rate approaching 100%.
The fact that there are at least 3 different recognized strains could explain some of the differences witnessed historically about how the disease spread and how _anyone_ managed to survive.
Sorry, these stats are actually very incorrect. I did a university essay on the Black Death and had to read extensively on this issue. Septicaemic plague was the rarest form, and only made up for approximately 1-5% of cases if that, but was almost always fatal. Surviving this was about 997/1000 people dead.
Pneumonic plague was safer than septicaemic, but only slightly. Roughly 90-95% mortality rate, but the issue is, this was the most widely spread via human to human, as it was in the aerosols coughed up by the sick that would infect everyone around them. As Kevin said in the video, this is the "breath of death" plague.
Bubonic plague would kill 4 in every 5 people in about 6-8 days. It was very, very deadly as well, but not as deadly as the pneumonic or septicaemic.
Many people, however, with bubonic and pneumonic plague would go on to develop septicaemic plague, where it infected their blood as the disease progressed, which killed them always.
@hikelfin5941 , sorry about that. I was going purely from memory from when I covered it in college. It's been about 15 years now 😝. I do appreciate the more accurate information though.
I do have something interesting you might not know though: bubonic plague is endemic to the United States (primarily the southwest) carried by deer mice and prairie dogs. Apparently this causes issues on native American reservations where it's not uncommon to keep prairie dogs as pets.
@@chthulu27 The bubonic plague is and was endemic to many regions, and is endemic in many countries today. I'm not quite sure what you mean.
@@hikelfin5941 , that would be quite a revelation to a LOT of people I assure you. The average person has no idea the bubonic plague is still running around in living (albeit animal) populations today.
@@chthulu27 Maybe they wouldn't, I'm not sure. This is something I learned in grade 6. Lol. Same with small pox and measles.
Kevin Hicks? Thank you for your stories you tell them so well
You’re a great storyteller. Since we’re not being bombarded with dramatic images (which is so common with ai) we can truly focus on your words and the imagination runs wild.
It might sound kind of lame but when you were describing the village in the final story under quarantine I could see it in my imagination, the plague stone, the lovers, all of it. Well done sir.
That's lovely to hear, thank you 👍🏻
A Journal of the Plague Year was the best book I read in 2020. All of the human behavior in that book matched perfectly with the insanity happening all around me during the pandemic. It brought me some solace, knowing that we had survived worse.
I always think of Ingmar Bergman’s famous film “The Seventh Seal” where a Swedish knight returning home from the crusades in 1348 during the first wave of the Black Death and encounters Death and duels with him for his life. Such a great film!
Looking at the black death from an economic perspective, at least from what we were taught, is that the Black Death was one of the factors that allowed humans to escape the Malthusian Trap and pave the wave for population growth.
There weren't enough people to tend to the fertile lands, so they were paid more, providing more income but better crop yields due to the fertile land.
....and here we are today, now their trying to get rid of us for Economics. How the stone wheel has turned!
For a few years, *some* farmers were paid more, briefly. And then in the long term, *all* farmers were paid more, permanently. But in between, there were a few generations where the landowners (being feudal lords) simply responded to the peasants' demands for more pay by making it illegal to ask, and then punishing them when they asked anyway. In English history, for instance, you're looking at the "Statute of Laborers" from 1351. Also, remember that a small labor pool is a two-edged sword: if you can charge more for your goods and services, so can all the other survivors. Inflation becomes a problem.
It’s also where Surnames (Last names) mainly originated from. Before a person would rarely if ever leave their village so if you were named George and the only George in town that was good enough. Afterwards they needed another name to differentiate between people so last names became either the town you came from or a lot of the times what your profession was. Smith, Taylor, Farmer etc. My last name comes from son of a rope maker and my family crest has three hemp rakes on it because hemp was used for ropes and cordage.
@@ryanhampson673that’s very interesting.. I wonder where my last name Parker comes from
@@Koutsimoukagood question. I’ve often thought about origins of second names. Mine is McGuirk. Id love to know what it means, or if actually even means anything
I was always under the impression when bubonic plague turns into pneumonic plague, that is when the plague becomes airborn. It also becomes twice as deadly when it makes that transition.
Kevin, My daddy told me about the “Pest” house of the early 1900’s in West Virginia, USA. He was just a child then & he said that there was a stone where the provisions for the unfortunate souls in the pest house were housed. I had never thought of this until I heard of it on the Historysquad. I feel as if you’ve shared volumes of gems from the past. I feel as if I’m time traveling on a great adventure each time I watch you! Thanks so much.
It's incredible how people back then were able to figure things out such as an incubation period with the plague or some seemingly impossible task at the time like discovering planets in the solar system. Just incredible, those lads
Hi, Kevin Hicks! Love your videos. One small correction? The Yersinia pestis is not the flea. It is the bacteria carried by the fleas that can live on rats, amongst other mammals.
Yes, the rats might not be able to travel by themselves so fast. But, when they stowaway on ships, they can travel far and fast. Also, the fleas that carry the Yersinia pestis bacteria can transfer to one human to another human. The fleas might also get wrapped up in a rug and then, when that rug arrives at the destination and is shaken out the fleas and any waste they have made might be flung into the air.
I live in New Mexico, USA where the Bubonic Plague still exists. We like to say we are "The Land of the Flea and the Home of the Plague." When it first comes on, it can resemble the flu. But, if your doctor is informed you have been here, they can check for it and save your life. I know a man who's had it twice!
A New York couple visited here a few years back and went home then felt like they had the flu. The New York City doctors were puzzled. As soon as the news got back here, a doctor was able to get the right stuff to NYC to save them.
Please keep making your excellent videos!
Next time on Jackanory...
I was reading an article about the plague in the USA in which it said that there's around seven cases a year! There were pictures of a man who'd camped in a National Park, (in California if I remember correctly), near a ground squirrel burrow in which the squirrel had died. The fleas seemed to be a tad peckish and fed on the camper. He developed the infection which led to septicaemic plague and the loss of his nose and fingers. I believe that in 2022 a squirrel in Colorado was found to be carrying plague. I wonder if this represents a spread to previously plague free areas? I hope that this is of some interest to you.
Yes, as a medical microbiologist I did have to play that make and make sure I'd heard correctly. Y. pestis is definitely a bacteria.
That's correct. The plague also still exists in India where there are several cases every year. In the South Western US it's mainly wildlife that carries the plague, and that can spread to humans.
Don't prairie dogs also carry it, or the flea that carries it? Thought I had read that a few years ago when an older couple, visiting NY from Arizona passed away from it. ...Hi all from SW Oklahoma
This is fantastic quality, as usual. Every video is better content than documentaries on state television, and it's just one man, dedicated to telling history.
Glad I found this channel.
I am always happy to see a new video from you, I find them very well made and informative and sometimes fun, in my opinion your channel is the best ones that there is, when it comes to this time of period in history.
Thank you for uploading another one video!
Thank you very much!
That was totally absorbing and absolutely fascinating. Brilliantly presented too, by a natural, effortless teacher. Kevin Hicks should have his own TV show! BBC give this man a series!!!
Haha, cheers!
theres an art to telling a story to an audience and you have it, i put you along side mr ballen thank you
You have an absolute talent of storytelling the medieval history and i love it.
This is a frightening plague. I'm intrigued by this revisionist history of its beginnings. "You must always keep an open mind when it comes to history." Excellent quote from you. I personally am always open to have my opinion affected as new information comes along from a reliable and verifiable source. I love trekking through history with you. Thanks, Kevin, for another great journey.
My pleasure, cheers 👍🏻
Hello! Love these videos. I'm a nurse and completed a project on yersinia pestis during my pre-requisite studies. While rats are most commonly associated with the plague, anything which may carry fleas can be a vector for the bacteria. I wonder what that would have been in Iceland? Pneumonic form certainly existed as well.
I can think of no better place to hear of the plague. Such a close up account, it's like experiencing it in person.
Thanks, Kevin. I knew that the plague, and the Black Death started with the fleas from the rats, but then quickly spread from person to person. I can't even begin to really imagine living with this for so long, and of course, there was not really any other idea of how to treat it other than the isolation of victims via quarantine. I really wish that history teachers could have had the enthusiasm for the story that you do, and I hope that history stays important to coming generations. Cheers from Texas.
Most enjoyable. Reminds me of our gd 9 history teacher here in Canada, Stanley Etchells. In those days gd 9 centred on British history. Mr. Etchells served with the British 8th Army in Italy; he taught us Morse Code at lunch time. In those days, all of the boys in my school were members of Army Cadet and learned to play with Bren Guns, first aid and signals. I even wore hob-nailed boots. Mr. Etchells described that when he was learning about the Black Death the teacher took them to the basement, removed a few bricks and started slipping our bones. The school was built on a burial pit. I'm not sure where Mr Etchell's school was located, but I recall his hillarious rendition of working at a "loom" in his dad's textile factory.
Wow, a time gone by. We must be of a similar age, my teachers fought in the war and I did similar things, cadets etc. 👍🏻
I've just discovered your channel, and while I've always loved history, you have a certain way of telling stories that makes this very interesting without needing to have fake videos or repetitive sliding images. I appreciate the effort you put into it, and can't wait to see your new content! Cheers
Thanks 👍🏻
This gentleman, in my opinion, is one of the most entertaining characters on the internet. His quiet humour and informative storytelling is a pleasant escape from the usual cacaphony of unsettling bullcrap that is the majority of the internet today. As a former soldier and policeman, tough callings to be sure, it's a measure of his honest and gentle character that he has retained such humour and optimism. I'm quite happy that he chose my country to settle in his golden years. We are much richer for it. 🇨🇦
How lovely of you, thank you very much.
This channel is a treasure. Thank you so much!
KEVIN, you remind me of my old History teacher from many many years ago. Dennis Humphries was his name. He not only taught but he took you with him on a journey every lesson. To this day history is my favourite subject, Thanks very much Sir
Wow, thanks. 👍🏻
I was actually aware of the near constant status of plague-stricken regions that the sickness periodically showed up in over hundreds of years during the high middle ages in Europe. I really enjoyed this video. Thanks Doctor Hicks 😎. Awaiting your next upload as always!
Wow, this video was incredibly well-crafted! Kevin Hicks delves into the depths of the Black Death with such compelling storytelling and a captivating narrative that I could listen to him all day. The way he explores and unravels the complexities surrounding the deadliest plague in human history is absolutely immersive. It’s fascinating how he sheds new light on the conventional beliefs about the Bubonic Plague, challenging the long-held notion that rats or the fleas they carried were the primary culprits. The discussion about the bacterium Yersinia pestis and the intriguing examination of historical cures add rich layers to our understanding. Kevin’s ability to humanise the sheer scale of this tragedy through personal stories is truly remarkable. Medical history is fascinating, and I wish this content were part of the medical curriculum. Please do more videos on medical history. Great job on this enlightening and engaging video! Thank you ❤
Thanks for your very kind comments 👍🏻
I visited Eyam only a few days ago, a fascinating and tragic story. The church is beautiful, but its a bit of a hike up to Mompesson's well where I believe they dropped supplies off to the isolating village.
I was always under the impression that Yesenia pestis was the name of the bacteria that fleas carry. Which commonly infect rodents. Although it can infect all mammals. And the different types of plagues are spread by different ways the bacteria can infect you. Such as coughing can spread it if the bacteria has incubated in your lungs rather than your blood. Which is how a flee would infect you. In the US in the southwest such as NM and AZ there are still reported plague cases from people camping but common antibiotics can cure it. The bacteria isn't only local to Asia.
You are right, it is the bacteria 👍🏻
Thanks Kevin, fascinating. The plague arrived in Eyam (pronounced eem) late August 1665. It came in a parcel of cloth sent from London to the village tailor Alexander Hadfield. When Hadfield’s assistant George Viccars spread the cloth out by the fire to air, he found it was infested with rat fleas. He died a few days later.
I put this vid on and it took 3 mins and my grandson was listening halfway through he had taken over my seat and by the end of it he was eagerly wanting to discuss this one with me, thank you from a nanna Knight in Australia for the quality time with a grandson.
There is some speculation that the Bubonic Plague of the time spread more like a modern Pneumonic Plague. This strain has, thank God, died out. Fingers crossed never to return. A long incubation in the victim is a nightmare disease to control and could explain why it spread so far in a society with transportation modes far slower than today.
Yeah, they finally found it in 2018 in Madagascar I think.
There was a pneumonic version, it was airborne.
This isn't speculation, this is what happened. The bubonic plague spread from fleas on rats to humans, where it morphed in to the pneumonic plague when it was spread from human to human. I didn't think this was controversial.
Excellent points and fascinating video Unfortunately, IIRC the sylvan plague that lurks in the (western) American wilds has a propensity to go pneumonic; I've heard of several fatalities from this (also it has the horrifying habit of becoming septicemic plague) . One gentleman miraculously survived after being in a coma from septicemic plague that he contracted when he tried to save a stray kitten that was infected (it apparently coughed on him but strangely enough, he developed septicemic rather than pneumonic). The guy lost all his fingers and his nose IIRC. Another gentleman unfortunately perished when he developed pneumonic plague from a bobcat that he had skinned; IIRC epidemiologists believe he actually contracted plague from a flea on the bobcat (he hadn't let it hang and get cold long enough for the fleas to depart), but his infection "went pneumonic" soon after he was bitten
@@kingjoe3rd There was a pneumonic form that was airborne. Deadlier & more unpleasant, if that's possible.
Excellent as usual. I have visited the grave at Eyam on one of my long distance walks with the LDWA. Nice to hear the story again from your goodself.
You are brilliant, Mr. Hicks. You really bring history alive. Bravo.
I agree
Thank you!
I recently discovered your channel and love how you tell stories. I have a small correction for you though. Yersinia pestis is the name of the bacteria suspected of causing plague, not the flea. The flea's species is Xenopsylla cheopis. Yersinia is still around and seen in veterinary medicine (one of several factors affecting the endangered black-footed ferret in the US) and in people, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, but also in the Americas as well.
Yes, thanks for that, my error 👍🏻
Hey Kevin, the world needs your voice to read or narrate books! Love you, the set, and story telling as always!
Thanks 👍🏻
The lightness of touch in this presentation is a welcome relief from the awful facts. Nicely done!
What's crazy is people are still catching the plague. It's nowhere near the same severity as the "Black Death", however it is still out there. In my state of California, a few years ago now there was a big story about a man catching the plague, the first time in 5 years. In that same year 5 people had gotten it, from California to Colorado to New Mexico. Absolutely crazy.
I used to have pet domestic rats ( very different than wild rats, cute and gentle) and occasionally some idiot would get hysterical and start yelling about how I would get plague. I patently would try to explain it was the fleas and my rats didn't have fleas. Thank you for going into this.
What an great show! Such a amazing amount of facts and information to enlighten and also dispel long held beliefs of how the plagur started.
Thank you for sharing your wealth of research!
Fascinating. Really enjoying this channel
I LOVE history. Thank you for your research and the courage to make this channel. Good for you and good for me that I found you. I'm Canadian with British/Irish/Welsh heritage. I can't get enough of the history. Keep bring these awesome stories.❤❤❤
Where has this history channel been when I’ve been doing my searches?? I could sit and listen to this guy…
I think this is the second video I've seen that referenced that source. The other one focused pretty much exclusively on the quarantine aspect, so this broader focus is interesting. Thank you, Kevin!
The inventiveness and work Kevin puts into his props and his interesting presentations make this one of the best history channels.
Always informative and interesting, they're all such a pleasure to watch n rewatch.
Excellent as always Kevin, thanks very much.
Another great show Kevin....cheers
I could listen to you forever. Love your story telling
Fantastic story, Kev! Daniel DeFoe wrote about the plague years after it occurred; he was born in ~1660, which put him at five years old at the time.
Yeah, I realised that later 👍🏻
I am a history enthusiast. And my love of history deepen even more and more when I watch your videos with your extraordinary british accent and learn unique words thanks to your rich lexicon.
Thank you!
Hey new subscriber here and currently pouring through all your videos. It's great to see someone so enthusiastic about history and who can tell the stories so well.
G😮
I'm new too and enjoying these intriguing history stories. Just enthralling.
Thanks & welcome Tom 👍🏻
Well, apparently my pocket left that little gem of a comment without my authorization, so I just wanted to revise it to say this is one of my favorite channels on TH-cam within the realm of historical study and such. Stumbled on the channel via the tour of Goodrich castle. If I may just put forward a fan request, without any attached pressure or anything, if it’s possible, Kev, might you be willing to do more videos of a similar nature to that? I love your usual content as well, there’s no problems whatsoever there, but I just love the way you present the history and focus on what I consider to be many of the most interesting details, relevant anecdotes, and other pertinent tidbits of knowledge and information. Most other channels just do a very basic “walkthrough,” most of the time without even a basic or cursory history included, and often no verbal input or information at all. It can be super frustrating when the camera pans past some rare, unique, or otherwise interesting feature of some fortress or another, and just moves right on along without even a second look. I’ve seen some people just waltz right past intriguing passages, unique architectural or defensive features, and the like, without so much as a passing comment, let alone a useful description or relevant anecdote. The History Squad doesn’t mess around with such nonsense, and I love it. =] I know you can’t be going to a different castle every week or anything, but if you have the opportunity, I’m sure I’m lot the only one who would be very excited to see such content from you. I’m not sure if you even still live in the UK, which would make that rather difficult if not, but I figured I’d throw it out there. Thanks for what you do!
@@kadoj yes I did wonder what you meant
fantastic, comprehensive look at the plague. wish more of us in modern times would utilize and understand the lessons that it can teach us.
What a fascinating and equally horrifying story. Thank you for telling it so well.
I remember years back when they finally came out with what the difference between the 2 plagues were but I can't remember for the life of me what they called the 2 but one of them was caused by the rats & fleas but I believe the other one was bacterial or viral but I can't remember which one it was or what they named it as.
I loved your presentation for this episode.
You truly have the great gift & talent for historical presentations.
I'm a long time history buff that will be 70 this month & who loved history my whole life. I wish all of our history teachers here had such gifts that would get the kids jazzed up about history.
I also wish our history teachers were aloud to tell the truth about our history's wrong doings as well as our accomplishments but that takes honesty about our history's wrong doings.
This quote is so true>"If we forget our history, we are doomed to repeat our mistakes", which I would add "our misdeeds" as well as mistakes because we have a lot of misdeeds that weren't mistakes but outright lies to cover up our misdeeds throughout our history.
Keep up the good work you're doing. 😊
I ❤ all things history lol.
Thank you for your lovely comment 👍🏻
@@thehistorysquad
Thank you for taking the time to reply about my comment.
I love watching your historical presentations.
Im happy that i have discovered this channel
You could make any kind of horror into a comforting bedtime story. Kudos to you, sir. It is not an easy thing, what you do so well.
Thanks!
This was a challenging video for me to watch. I love history, and I find historical diseases fascinating. But the sheer scale of pain and horror that people endured...it keeps me awake at night. Thanks for the engaging presentation, Mr. Hicks, and for those *hilarious* chicken moments.
Cheers 👍🏻
I'm always learning something new from Kevin, and in the most pleasant of ways. Thank you sir!
I think as a child most people are told spit facts that the black death was spread by rats, I certainly know in the 90's that's what I was taught (from memory it was after we all did the nursery rhyme about it one day) but as we learn, rats just can't move as fast as the black death spread, only humans could accomplish it.
Amazing to me that even though (to my knowledge) they still operated on "the four humors" in that period, that some people still had the ability to examine practically and came to the conclusion it was spread from person to person by actual contact.
We truly do not give previous generations enough credit at times.
I still find it fascinating that we have been using honey for thousands of years medicinally.
The story about the guy not hearing from his betrothed truly was one of millions of sad deaths I imagine.
Definately makes one grateful for all our advancements and understandings about hygiene and disease.
Wonderful video once again!
Thanks for your comment 👍🏻
Interesting talk on the plague, brought it home a bit as I live in Penrith. There are a number of houses from that period still here and lived in. Imagine what those houses saw. We also have a plague stone here. Thanks Kevin.
A pleasure 👍🏻
What is a plague stone?
@@scottcarroll7782I think it was where they left supplies for another village if I heard right.
@@scottcarroll7782 it's a stone where food was delivered to the afflicted during an outbreak of plague
Boy that’s terrifying. Also it makes you think what would civilization look like had these plagues never took place
As a trained AnE nurse I was astounded by the fact that our ports were kept open during Covid.
With 100, 000 people arriving through Heathrow Airport in such a short space of time, a mere few hours, we were exposed to Covid very quickly.
Commerce and Greed took the place of commons sense...😮😮
I live in Auckland, pretty much the economic powerhouse of New Zealand. We were very lucky with our government and the lockdowns but there were opponents and subversives who made very unexpected allies. I can see how the slow spread would happen even if the vast majority of the population with modern education did what they were supposed to.
COVID is a perfect example of how fear takes place of common sense. COVID was out and about long before we even knew about its existence. The lockdowns did nothing to prevent its spread, but caused enormous damage to the physical and mental health of people, especially children and adolescents, and in addition caused serious economic damage.
All evidence suggest l**kdowns were not an effective measure proportionate to the risk we ever faced from C*vid. It was ever a fraction as dangerous as the plague.
Then add all the missed cancer diagnoses, etc.
The biggest public health mistake in history.
Go to Texas, millions of illegal Mexicans pouring through the border completely unknown.
Yes. Common sense.
Over sickness with a 99.97% survival rate.
Yes, closing your ports would have stopped goods from coming in.
SO Yeha common sense...
Something you don"t have huh
I really enjoy your videos. This plague stuff creeps me out but its also fascinating. Thanks.
Glad you enjoy it!
Very interesting Kev, I always thought it was just the fleas and rats, not from person to person. Makes sense if you think about it but I was taught the same. Thank you Dr Kev.
Mr. Hicks, thank you for this story. It sent chills down my spine.
Absolutely spellbinding stories about history 😊. Thank you so much for all of the great information, especially the way you tell it 😮
I love this channel Kevin . I really like your delivery of the subject , you make it all sound so fascinating. Well done with this mate
Thank you kindly
What an amazing video.
As people lived in crowded port cities, and kept animals indoors, still see that fleas and sick people could both spread the disease. But you have done another fantastic job making history come alive. The cures sound more terrifying than the disease.😮
Love you're historical storytelling style! Especially you're videos touring medieval castles lol I've never seen one in person as I live in the US but through you're videos it makes me feel like I'm right there!
Thank you very much!
Always excellent and informative!!! 👍😊👍
I really love this channel and this a hyper specific request, but some of my favorite channels have started releasing the audio of their videos on Spotify and I would love if you started to do that because I like listening to your videos as I go to sleep. Don't know how difficult the process is, but if you follow through I will most definitely support your patreon.
I grew up going to Warwick castle everytime I visited my family in England as a kid and was obsessed with knights. As an American this is not super common and I wonder if you had a part to play in that early obsession. Your videos have shown me that I still have that same love for medieval history and all that stories that accompany them. Don't worry about the request if it is too much of a bother, but I feel that not having your voice and storytelling in audio form would be a shame because I think many would benefit from hearing your voice while driving, hiking, or in my strange case sleeping.
Hi Mike, that's really interesting, we've actually begun to think about creating podcasts already, Julie just needs to get her head around it and look at the process, how it works and how it would grow etc., but your comment has spurred us on to maybe look a bit harder now.
Bear with us, but if we do, we'll announce it here on a community post and on Facebook.
Thanks for your interest and kind words.
Kevin 👍🏻
This chanel is a treasure trove of knowledge
Kevin, you had me in pieces with the chicken! 😂 Another thoroughly engaging talk where I learned something new from you, yet again. Thank you for all of the work you and your team put into these videos. Truly excellent. 👍👏
Our pleasure, thanks 👍🏻
visited eyam 10 years ago on school trip, was amazing, saw the stones, the bit where the lovers would meet, was AMAZING
remember visiting the house where the tailor died too, cool stuff
Wow. Absolutely fascinating. So much of what I thought I knew about the plague has, as you said in the beginning, been flipped on its head! Wonderful video Kevin, you’ve earned yourself a new subscriber!
Thank you for the info. I also thought it was spread per fleas on rats.
Thanks for another FASCINATING video, Kevin 😊
Glad you enjoyed it
I think you might have misunderstood some things Kevin, Yersinia pestis is a bacteria, not the flea itself ;) the flea carried these bacteria and transmitted them by biting but it could also be transmitted from person to person by spit drops when contagious. So you have 2 forms of plague. From flea bites and the longue plague which was transmitted by couching.
Thank you for pointing this out, I'm surprised more people didn't give more attention to this comment.
I love that you have a plague mask just laying around to make this video because of course you would. Kevin you are the best history presenter on TH-cam hands down.
Bless you, thanks!!
Very interesting video as per usual.
The cause of the Black Death was definitely caused be the Yersinia pestis bacterium, which has been proven by DNA analysis of remains.
Transmission is most likely a combination of the rat flea AND human to human contact, I.e not solely one method. Plaque rates reduced significantly during winter, where rats are less active. Also rat fleas will bite humans and other mammals when their normal host animal dies. Humans lived in much closer proximity to animals in urban areas then than today.
Another important factor is that the Yersinia pestis bacterium can be present in flea excrement. The bacterium can thus be spread via the air.
Add to that human to human contagion, trade routes carrying rats , and dormant fleas resulted in the perfect cocktail.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video.
Have you any videos about leprosy in medieval Britain?
Thanks
Not yet
One of the pest symptoms is hearing voices distorted so be ware!
I see what you did there!
I love this channel, I never knew there were 2 distinct but similar plagues. Learn something new everyday!
I live in the west midlands and there's areas of ground you can't dig up due to the the plague still in the ground due to dead bodies being there.
That is legitimately terrifying.
Great Channel!!! I've heard there are still several thousand cases of it in more rural areas in around the globe each year, I think the US report 350-400 cases each year, which is creepy in and of itself. I thought it was all bacterial, I wasn't aware the scientists were still trying to track down exactly what it is.
You are one of my favorite historical narrators. (Also thank you for a delightfully casual representation of Vitiligo! I've hesitated to mention it, but representation matters.)
Thanks 👍🏻
Bless you Kevin me and my partner visited eam in Derbyshire its a wonderful visit the plague cottages are occupied now and i would imagine things would go bump in the night for sure .. can i say your the most informative most interesting historian I've ever seen with your knowledge and costumes I feel like I've been transported back its almost as if your telling the facts and the information like you've been there and whittnesed it with your own eyes it truly fantastic please don't ever stop making these take care Kevin .
Paul cheadle Stockport
That's really kind of you Paul, thank you, I'll try 👍🏻
Hiya pal 🖐️ Great show !!! I wish I had a history teacher like you at school 😅 I would of listened 👍
Cheers 👍🏻
Thanks Kevin Another great Video From Blue
Ah great, was waiting for you to post a new vid.
Iceland? I thought it would end up in Asda! :)
😂
He for my man's love for his gig! And a history lesson.
Another great one, Kev! I coulda swore you were about to say smallpox, but no. The good ol' bubonic. Interesting to learn that there's still an abiding mystery about it.
Great videos as always Kevin love from BirminghamUK x
Cheers Sam
I'm really enjoying your videos, you're a great storyteller, 👍 👌. I saw a program on TV some time ago, I'm pretty sure it was about this, and the hypothesis was that it was spread by human body lice which also infested the clothes, so when they died and their clothes were passed on to another person, they too got infected. After a while, all the clothes were burned.