Geoffroy Andrés Sáez, Díaz Joel Parra
Departamento de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de La Frontera, Temuco, Chile.
Departamento de Educación, Universidad de La Frontera, Chile.
Rev Chilena Infectol. 2020 Aug;37(4):450-455. doi: 10.4067/S0716-10182020000400450.
Between the 2nd and 3rd centuries the Roman Empire suffered two great plagues, the Antonine Plague, of which there is a bibliography, and the lesser known Plague of Cyprian. As an overview, both pandemics resemble the crisis that in 2020 the Coronavirus is generating in many aspects of human life. This article focuses on the impact that the Cyprian plague had in the context of the crisis of the third century, its mortality is estimated between 10-20% of the population in the affected places, finally its effects generated several of the necessary conditions for the transition from the ancient to the medieval world. It is about understanding how the cycle of plagues that went from the 2nd century to the 3rd century changed the appearance of the Roman world and what lessons history gives us 1700 years later.
在公元2世纪至3世纪期间,罗马帝国遭受了两场大瘟疫,一场是有相关文献记载的安东尼瘟疫,另一场是鲜为人知的塞浦路斯瘟疫。总体而言,这两场大流行病在许多方面类似于2020年新冠病毒在人类生活诸多方面所引发的危机。本文聚焦于塞浦路斯瘟疫在公元3世纪危机背景下所产生的影响,据估计,在受影响地区,其造成的死亡率占当地人口的10%至20%,最终,它所产生的影响为从古代世界向中世纪世界的转变创造了若干必要条件。本文旨在理解从公元2世纪到3世纪的瘟疫循环是如何改变罗马世界的面貌,以及1700年后的今天,历史能给我们带来哪些教训。