Instant Classics

The Great Plague of Athens

Mar 19, 2026
A vivid retelling of the 430 BCE plague that tore Athens apart. They probe Thucydides’ clinical symptom list and his claim to scientific objectivity. The conversation traces social collapse, moral panic, and political fallout including Pericles’ fate. They weigh modern medical theories and draw stark parallels to recent epidemics.
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INSIGHT

Thucydides Frames The Plague As Medical Observation

  • Thucydides treats the plague as an observed medical event, not divine punishment.
  • He records detailed symptoms and traces the disease's spread from Ethiopia through Egypt into Athens, emphasizing empirical observation.
INSIGHT

Graphic Symptom Sequence Defies Simple Diagnosis

  • Thucydides gives a vivid three-stage symptom sequence that resists neat modern diagnosis.
  • Symptoms include sore throat, bleeding, vomiting, pustules, intolerable internal heat, diarrhoea, and later loss of extremities.
INSIGHT

Many Retrodiagnoses But No Consensus

  • Attempts to retro-diagnose the Athenian plague have produced many conflicting candidates.
  • Proposed causes have ranged from measles, typhoid, and smallpox to Ebola, tularemia, and hybrid infections, with no consensus.
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