1258-05-19-London: Difference between revisions
From EpiMedDat
Created page with "{{Disease |Date start=1258-05-19 |Date end= |Place=London |Keyword=Epidemics; Mortality |Reference=Matthaei Parisiensis: Chronica majora 1872–1884, Vol. 5, p. 693. |Reference translation=Translation by Martin Bauch |Summary=Immense disease in London. |Text=Anno eodem, circa festum Trinitatis, immanis pestis et intolerabilis populum praecipue invasit et afflictum miserabiliter peremit. |Language=Latin |Translation=In the same year (1258), around the feast of..." |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|Date end= | |Date end= | ||
|Place=London | |Place=London | ||
|Keyword=Epidemics; Mortality | |Keyword=Epidemics; Mortality; Trinity | ||
|Reference=Matthaei Parisiensis: Chronica majora 1872–1884, Vol. 5, p. 693. | |Reference=Matthaei Parisiensis: Chronica majora 1872–1884, Vol. 5, p. 693. | ||
|Reference translation=Translation by Martin Bauch | |Reference translation=Translation by Martin Bauch | ||
Latest revision as of 02:55, 23 December 2025
Map
Factbox
| Date startStart date of the disease. | 1258-05-19 Sunday | + |
| Date endEnd date of the disease. | + | |
| SeasonSeason (spring, summer, fall or winter) | ||
| Date otherOther mentioned dates. | ||
| PlacePlace(s), city or location of the disease. | London | |
| RegionHistorical region(s) | England | |
| CountryCurrent country | ||
| RiverMentioned river(s) | ||
| Natural eventMentioned natural event(s) | ||
| PersonMentioned persons(s) | ||
| GroupGroup(s) of people mentioned | ||
| VictimIndication of victims | + | |
| AnimalMentioned animal(s) | ||
| DiseaseMentioned disease(s) | ||
| Epidemic waveAssociated epidemic wave | ||
| Social responseSocial response that happened in reaction to the disease | ||
| LanguageLanguage of the original text | Latin | |
| KeywordFurther keyword(s) | Epidemics, Mortality, Trinity | |
| last edited | 23. 12. 2025 by EpiMedDat-Bot. |
Text originalOriginal text
Anno eodem, circa festum Trinitatis, immanis pestis et intolerabilis populum praecipue invasit et afflictum miserabiliter peremit.
Text translationEnglish translation of the text
In the same year (1258), around the feast of the Trinity, an immense and intolerable disease especially struck the people, miserably afflicting and killing them.
