A Moment in Time – the plague years

A Moment In Time

In 2017 I published A Moment in Time, the first of Peter Sargent’s East Anglian history books. Subsequently A Place in History (2018) and Anglian Annals (2019) were published. Each book features 50 stories from Norfolk and Suffolk’s past. Sometimes Peter strays over the  Cambridgeshire and Essex and includes items from there as well.

Over the last year, we have had to get used to living with the Covid-19 pandemic. But now we have a brighter life on the horizon thanks to the various vaccines created and distributed in record time.

In A Moment in Time, Peter reflected on the Black Death in Norfolk. I’ve included the story in full, so you can see how our medieval, 16th and 17th century ancestors coped with their pandemic.

The Plague Years by Peter Sargent

“There is great death in Norwich, and in other borough towns in Norfolk, for I assure you that it is the most universal death that I ever knew in England.”

Not another war?

Worse. Much, much worse. The plague. This letter of 1471 from Margaret Paston to her son in London illustrates the great fear of town dwellers for more than three cernturies. Plague – the catchall term for the epidemic diseases that ravaged Europe. In 1348-49 the Balck Death killed up to a quarter of the population of Europe. More than 25 million people are believed to have perished in this first, and most deadly, outbreak of bubonic plague. Within a year or so it disappeared only to break out again for the next 300 years.

What is bubonic plague?

It got its name from the painful, swollen lymph nodes, called buboes, which appeared on sufferers’ bodies, frequently in the groin area. Dried blood under the skin turned black. After its onset death came to seven in 10 of those affected within two or three days. It was an awful death. Nobody knew what caused it. We think now that the infectious fever is caused by the bacillus Yersinia pestis transmitted to humans by rat fleas. At a time when people lived close to animals in unhygienic conditions, it was easy for the fleas to find a human host. Contemporaries blamed the plague on moral corruption, and looked for convenient scapegoats. It was thought too much exercise, too much sex or taking hot baths caused disease. Others thought it was spread by miasmas – poisons in the air.

What happened in East Anglia?

The first outbreak was on the south coast of England in August, 1348. It followed trade routes, spreading throughout the country. In Norwich they sought shelter behind their walls, but walls do not keep rats out. The 18th centiury historian, Francis Blomefield reported that it reached the city on January 1, 1349. No accurate records were kept of how many people died. Blomefield calculated it at 57,304 people, but that seems far too high a figure. Recent estimates indicate that out of a population, which may have been as high as 25,000 in 1348, as few as 6,000 survived, or were still living in the city, 20 years later. Two thirds of the clergy died and only one in three market stalls were occupied the next year. The dead were piled high in carts and buried in communal pits in the Cathedral Close. Others were buried in nearby St George Tombland churchyard. It is said the graveyards there had to be raised to cram in the bodies. In Lynn almost half the population died in 1349. Yarmouth was devasted. In its crowded Rows two thirds of the population perished, and construction of the town’s walls stalled for lack of workers. Economic life ground to a standstill, and some people abandoned their families when they became contaminated. Work abruptly stopped at Norwich Cathedral cloisters on June 25, 1349, according to ecclesiastical records, and did not restart until 1355.

But life went on…

Eventually the country recovered, though the reduction in population had a long term impact, and the psychological scars must have been deep indeed. Plague returned with varying virulence. People tended to lump bubonic plague in with other epidemics, such as the mysterious sweating sickness that claimed lives in the 1530s, typhus, smallpox, syphilis and all the other nasty ways you could die. Later outbreaks tended to hit towns and ports most severely, so places like Norwich, Yarmouth, Ipswich and Lynn were at risk. Poorer areas with the worst sanitation suffered, prompting the authorities to clamp down, blaming poverty for disease. The plague returned every 10 years or so until the next great outbreak. In 1578 Norwich celebrated the visit of Queen Elizabeth I. She had stayed in the city along with an entourage some 2000 strong. Soon after their departure that September, the worst plague epidemic since the 1340s arrived. This time there were officially 4,800 victims in Norwich, though the real number could have been twice that. The old pits were re-opened for mass burials. The city authorities ordered that contaminated houses should be isolated. They were locked and bolted from the outside, windows boarded up and red crosses painted on the doors. Sometimes the occupants survived. Most of the time the bodies were left until bailiffs had found somewhere for them to be buried. In one episode people in a quarantined house turned to cannabalism. The ghost of a young woman, which is said to appear in Tombland, is apparently that of a 1578 victim.

Some cheerful news please…

Well…you were a bit safer in the countryside. Richer people were able to leave town when the plague struck. The only thing that seemed to stop it was a destructive fire. Gradually people made the connection between overcrowded towns, dirty conditions and disease. Norwich suffered again in 1603 and 1625 so, when news of plague in London reached Norfolk in September, 1665, everyone held their breath. Ships from Yarmouth were turned away from the city walls, but the death toll grew. By the time it subsided in 1667 nearly 3000 people had died. This was the last outbreak of the bubonic plague in Britain. It disappeared as mysteriously as it had arrived.

Peter Sargent’s A Moment in Time, 50 stories that bring East Anglian history to life is on sale at Allthingsnorfolk, click here

 

Ripples of Hope – Manchester – one year on

It is a year since Illuminée Nganemariya was invited to take part in the launch of the Ripples of Hope Festival at Home Manchester, which is due to be staged in May 2021. Last January Covid-19 was just starting to spread from China, and we had no idea how all of our plans would have to be changed for the rest of 2020.

The Ripples of Hope Festival launch was organised by Robert F Kennedy Human Rights UK. Illuminée was interviewed on stage by Dennis Markus from Robert F Kennedy Human Rights about her experience in Rwanda in 1994 and subsequent life. I added to the interview by reading excerpts from Miracle in Kigali.

Sitting here in Norwich at the end of January 2021, one year on, and much older than we were in January 2020, it is so important for us to focus on ripples of hope.

Illuminèe received many kind words of encouragement after the event, when we were selling copies of Miracle in Kigali in the theatre foyer. She was also very pleased to meet actor and singer, Sifiso Mazibuko who performed at the launch.

John Elkington wrote in a blog post ‘Miracle in Manchester‘: “But at least for me, the most moving session of the evening came when Dennis interviewed Illuminée Nganemariya, a survivor of the Rwandan Genocide of 1994. An intense mixture of unimaginable brutalities, countered by the remarkable story of an amazing woman.”

“I talked to Illuminée afterwards, and her co-author Paul Dickson, bought a copy of the book Miracle in Kigali, and read it in its entirety on the train back to London this morning. The worst – and the best – of humankind.”

For an update on Illuminée, and how she has coped with the various lockdowns, read her interview at Emma Outten’s Folk Features. Click here

You can buy Miracle in Kigali at Allthingsnorfolk.com. Click here

Stay safe

The Lighter Side of the Lockdown

Published at the end of May 2020, The Lighter Side of the Lockdown is a booklet of poems by four Norwich friends, who were all self-isolating at the time. Illustrations were kindly provided by Rebecca Osborne.

Vee Pond was the first to start writing, to help lift her spirits during the lockdown. She posted her poems on Facebook, aiming to put a smile on the faces of her followers. Her poems inspired three of her friends, Linda Marie Augood, Kathryn Bryant and Carol Saunders to start writing as well.

The poems give a lighter view of living in the first lockdown, as the writers overcome their domestic frustrations and the day to day lockdown routine. But they also pay tribute to our front line workers who kept the country going. The last poem in the booklet particularly pays tribute to our NHS heroes. There’s also a poem about Captain Tom Moore and his fantastic NHS fundraising success.

The booklet is still on sale and is raising money for the Norfolk & Norwich Hospitals Charity in aid of the Intensive Care Unit at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals Foundation Trust. The booklet costs £5 plus £1.80 p+p. £3 from each purchase goes to the N&N Hospitals Charity.

The Lighter Side of the Lockdown is on sale at Allthingsnorfolk.com. To buy the booklet click here

Stay safe

Paul