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What Social Distancing Looked Like in 1666
dnyuz.com ^ | March 29, 2020 | Annalee Newitz

Posted on 03/30/2020 7:41:42 AM PDT by Red Badger

A lot of English people believed 1666 would be the year of the apocalypse. You can’t really blame them. In late spring 1665, bubonic plague began to eat away at London’s population. By fall, roughly 7,000 people were dying every week in the city. The plague lasted through most of 1666, ultimately killing about 100,000 people in London alone — and possibly as many as three-quarters of a million in England as a whole.

Perhaps the greatest chronicler of the Great Plague was Samuel Pepys, a well-connected English administrator and politician who kept a detailed personal diary during London’s darkest years. He reported stumbling across corpses in the street, and anxiously reading the weekly death tolls posted in public squares.

In August of 1665, Pepys described walking to Greenwich, “in my way seeing a coffin with a dead body therein, dead of the plague, lying in [a field] belonging to Coome farme, which was carried out last night, and the parish have not appointed any body to bury it, but only set a watch there day and night, that nobody should go thither or come thence, which is a most cruel thing.” To ensure that no one — not even the family of the dead person — would go near the corpse or bury it, the parish had stationed a guard. “This disease making us more cruel to one another than if we are doggs.”

It felt like Armageddon. And yet it was also the beginning of a scientific renaissance in England, when doctors experimented with quarantines, sterilization and social distancing. For those of us living through these stay-at-home days of Covid-19, it’s useful to look back and see how much has changed — and how much hasn’t. Humanity has been guarding against plagues and surviving them for thousands of years, and we have managed to learn a lot along the way.

When a plague hit England during the summer of 1665, it was a time of tremendous political turmoil. The nation was deep into the Second Anglo-Dutch War, a nasty naval conflict that had torpedoed the British economy. But there were deeper sources of internal political conflict. Just five years earlier in 1660, King Charles II had wrested back control of the government from the Puritan members of Parliament led by Oliver Cromwell.

Though Cromwell had died in 1658, the king had him exhumed, his corpse put in chains and tried for treason. After the inevitable guilty verdict, the King’s henchmen mounted Cromwell’s severed head on a 20-foot spike over Westminster Hall, along with the heads of two co-conspirators. Cromwell’s rotting head stayed there, gazing at London, throughout the plague and for many years after.

War and social upheaval hastened the spread of the plague, which had broken out several years earlier in Holland. But when he wasn’t displaying the severed heads of his enemies, the king was invested in scientific progress. He sanctioned the founding of the Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge, a venerable scientific institution known today as The Royal Society.

It was most likely thanks to his interest in science that government representatives and doctors quickly used social distancing methods for containing the spread of bubonic plague. Charles II issued a formal order in 1666 that ordered a halt to all public gatherings, including funerals. Already, theaters had been shut down in London, and licensing curtailed for new pubs. Oxford and Cambridge closed.

Isaac Newton was one of the students sent home, and his family was among the wealthy who fled the cities so they could shelter in place at their country homes. He spent the plague year at his family estate, teasing out the foundational ideas for calculus.

Things were less cozy in London. Quarantining was invented during the first wave of bubonic plague in the 14th century, but it was deployed more systematically during the Great Plague. Public servants called searchers ferreted out new cases of plague, and quarantined sick people along with everyone who shared their homes. People called warders painted a red cross on the doors of quarantined homes, alongside a paper notice that read “LORD HAVE MERCY UPON US.” (Yes, the all-caps was mandatory).

The government supplied food to the housebound. After 40 days, warders painted over the red crosses with white crosses, ordering residents to sterilize their homes with lime. Doctors believed that the bubonic plague was caused by “smells” in the air, so cleaning was always recommended. They had no idea that it was also a good way to get rid of the ticks and fleas that actually spread the contagion.

Of course, not everyone was compliant. Legal documents at the U.K. National Archives show that in April 1665, Charles II ordered severe punishment for a group of people who took the cross and paper off their door “in a riotious manner,” so they could “goe abroad into the street promiscuously, with others.” It’s reminiscent of all those modern Americans who went to the beaches in Florida over spring break, despite what public health experts told them.

Pepys was a believer in science, and he tried to follow the most cutting-edge advice from his doctor friends. This included smoking tobacco as a precautionary measure, because smoke and fire would purify the “bad air.” In June of 1665, as the plague began, Pepys described seeing red crosses on doors for the first time. “It put me into an ill conception of myself and my smell,” he writes, “so that I was forced to buy some roll-tobacco to smell and chaw, which took away the apprehension.”

Quack medicine will always be with us. But there was some good advice, too. During the Great Plague, shopkeepers asked customers to drop their coins in dishes of vinegar to sterilize them, using the 1600s version of hand sanitizer.

Just as some American politicians blame the Chinese for the coronavirus, there were 17th century Brits who blamed the Dutch for spreading the plague. Others blamed Londoners. Mr. Pepys had relocated his family to a country home in Woolwich, and writes in his diary that the locals “are afeard of London, being doubtfull of anything that comes from thence, or that hath lately been there … I was forced to say that I lived wholly at Woolwich.”

By late 1666, the plague had begun its retreat from England, but one disaster led to another. In autumn, the Great Fire of London destroyed the city’s downtown in a weeklong conflagration. The damage was so extensive in part because city officials were slow to respond, having already spent over a year dealing with plague. The fire left 70,000 Londoners homeless and angry, threatening to riot.

While the mayor of London issued orders to evacuate the city, Pepys had more pedestrian concerns: He wrote about helping a friend dig a pit in his garden, where the two men buried “my Parmazan cheese, as well as my wine and some other things.” Even in the middle of a civilization-shaking event, people will still hoard odd things, like toilet paper — or cheese.

Despite the war, the plague and the fire, London survived. Urbanites rebuilt relatively quickly, using the same basic street layout. In 1667, Pepys was bustling around the healing city, putting his rooms back in order and turning his thoughts to new developments in politics.

Pepys survived. Scholars are still not sure whether he ever retrieved his cheese.

Annalee Newitz (@Annaleen) is a contributing opinion writer and the author, most recently, of “The Future of Another Timeline.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Health/Medicine; History; Society
KEYWORDS: 1666; bubonic; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; plague; socialdistancing
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1 posted on 03/30/2020 7:41:42 AM PDT by Red Badger
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To: Red Badger

stock up on wine and cheese!


2 posted on 03/30/2020 7:46:37 AM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: mylife

DONE!..................


3 posted on 03/30/2020 7:49:38 AM PDT by Red Badger (If people were to God like dogs are to people, the world would be a really great place..............)
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To: mylife

Notice that it was ‘Parmazon’ cheese. IMPORTED HARD CHEESE!..............


4 posted on 03/30/2020 7:50:40 AM PDT by Red Badger (If people were to God like dogs are to people, the world would be a really great place..............)
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To: Red Badger

“Scholars are still not sure whether he ever retrieved his cheese”

His Sister had it away...apparently.....


5 posted on 03/30/2020 7:58:03 AM PDT by moose07 (DMCS (Dit Me Cong San ) Life really does begin at forty. Until then, you are just doing research.)
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To: Red Badger

Were political correct folks like muslims, drug users, illegals, gays and the homeless exempted from all public health decrees?

So......not quite the same.


6 posted on 03/30/2020 7:58:33 AM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with islamic terrorists - they want to die for allah and we want to kill them.)
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To: Red Badger

Who knew Pepys was so prescient!


7 posted on 03/30/2020 8:00:22 AM PDT by milagro (There is no peace in appeasement!)
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To: Red Badger

A good book on this was Daniel Defoe’s “Journal of the Plague Year.”


8 posted on 03/30/2020 8:03:13 AM PDT by ought-six (Multiculturalism is national suicide, and political correctness is the cyanide capsule.)
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To: Red Badger

1666 was also the year of the apostasy of Sabbatai Zevi, the precursor antichrist, and a false Messiah, a Kabbalist Rabbi of Syrna. Mostly through his follower Jacob Frank, began the Sabbataen plague.


9 posted on 03/30/2020 8:09:41 AM PDT by sasportas
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To: milagro

Pepys was one slippery character.
If you read his diarys ,he changed sides with every flip of the coin during the Civil war, Commonwealth, and eventual restoration.
Every national mishap that he could engineer a benefit from he did.
Smart Chap.


10 posted on 03/30/2020 8:10:09 AM PDT by moose07 (DMCS (Dit Me Cong San ) Life really does begin at forty. Until then, you are just doing research.)
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To: Red Badger

err... the Chinese DID spread the virus, no doubt.


11 posted on 03/30/2020 8:10:13 AM PDT by jimmygrace
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To: Red Badger

T “ there were 17th century Brits who blamed the Dutch for spreading the plague”

Nigel Powers : There are only two things I can’t stand in this world: People who are intolerant of other people’s cultures, and the Dutch.


12 posted on 03/30/2020 8:14:42 AM PDT by moehoward
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To: Red Badger
Annalee Newitz


13 posted on 03/30/2020 8:14:56 AM PDT by nwrep
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To: jimmygrace

Yeah...I caught that also...this IS a virus from China


14 posted on 03/30/2020 8:15:50 AM PDT by goodnesswins (Trump is as good a dictator as he is a racist.....)
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To: Red Badger

“Doctors believed that the bubonic plague was caused by “smells” in the air, so cleaning was always recommended. They had no idea that it was also a good way to get rid of the ticks and fleas that actually spread the contagion.”

Kind of like believing that the current plague wasn’t caused by the ChiComs and spread by infected folks coming here. So keep the borders open, let em all in and don’t use some promising new treatments to save lives.

Meanwhile wash your hands and disinfect surfaces to control the spread.

“Science” can sometimes be controlled by a bunch of folks that get it so deadly wrong.


15 posted on 03/30/2020 8:20:54 AM PDT by Macoozie (Handcuffs and Orange Jumpsuits)
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To: Macoozie

Wait a minute. Perhaps she’s right. Perhaps I’ve been wrong to blindly follow the medical traditions and superstitions of past centuries. Maybe we barbers should test these assumptions analytically, through experimentation and a “scientific method”. Maybe this scientific method could be extended to other fields of learning: the natural sciences, art, architecture, navigation. Perhaps I could lead the way to a new age, an age of rebirth, a Renaissance!...Naaaaaahhh!

-Theodoric of York


16 posted on 03/30/2020 8:23:02 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: nwrep

From wiki: Newitz changed personal pronouns from “she” to “they” in 2019.

Very confusing reading about Newitz on wiki. All the “she” are now “they”. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annalee_Newitz


17 posted on 03/30/2020 8:23:40 AM PDT by Atlantan
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To: nwrep

Annalee Newitz photo

Does it still have its parts?
where they removed?
Added on?

I’m so confused . . . .


18 posted on 03/30/2020 8:24:39 AM PDT by Macoozie (Handcuffs and Orange Jumpsuits)
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To: ought-six; Red Badger

The “Diary of Samuel Pepys” is a book about Pepys, his times and his diary. It is very readable and explains in a compelling manner the times in which he lived. Pepys really did work his way from near the bottom to the highest rungs of English society. I believe he became the head of the Admiralty, eventually.

His personal life is also pretty interesting. He left an unvarnished record of his daily “affairs” and wrote the diary in code so it could not be read by others accidentally.

Fascinating to any history buff. Recommended.


19 posted on 03/30/2020 8:26:03 AM PDT by oldplayer
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To: Red Badger

We are barely able to keep up with our 7,000 dead a week.
Wish someone would remove the dead bodies laying in the streets or at least spray some Lysol on them?


20 posted on 03/30/2020 8:27:37 AM PDT by Leep (Everyday is Trump Day!)
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