The Great Pestilence came from the east, from
central China. It spread westward, carried by refugees and traders,
eventually arriving in France, and from there it reached England.
There had been other plagues, notably in 1234, but this was different.
It was carried by rats. They arrived in two vessels which sailed into
the harbour of Melcombe Regis in Dorset, now known as Weymouth. It soon
spread rapidly. Rats can travel great distances in grain, clothing,
etc. and the plague soon reached outlying towns and villages.
The disease was both infectious and contagious. It
was fatal to breathe
the air around the victim or touch him. People were so terrified that
they often deserted their families and friends and left them to die
alone.
At the onset of the disease swellings appeared in the armpits and in
the groin, followed by gangrene in the throat and lungs and acute pain.
The victim vomited blood and the body gave off a vile stench.
By March 1349 fifty seven clergy had died of the plague and in April a
further fifty one in Devon. Prayers were said in churches nationwide.
As each incumbent died, his successor donned the infected vestments of
his predecessor and was soon a victim himself.
Exeter's Bishop Grandisson made his home at
Chudleigh for the duration
of the plague. He considered it to be a safe place. The plague claimed
several of his relatives, including two of his sisters, Katherine and
Agnes, and two nephews. Only one member of the Royal Family fell victim
to the plague. Princess Joan, who died at Bordeaux on her way to Spain,
where she was to marry Pedro of Castile.
The plague was most virulent in the south east corner of Devon. Colyton
was the worst village, but all the villages around were badly infected.
Colyton lost four vicars in seven months. Twenty monks and three
brothers were buried at Newnham Abbey, which was close to the Dorset
border where the plague first struck.
The ranks of the clergy had been so much depleted that was impossible
to find incumbents for the vacant benefices. Elsewhere employers found
it difficult to get workers, as so many had died of the plague.
Beasts and cattle strayed everywhere for no-one was left to tend
them.
Work on Exeter Cathedral came to a halt. It was not possible to fill
the windows with stained glass. Men brought loads of faggots, clay and
hay, and these were used to stop up the gaps and keep out the wind and
rain. St Nicholas Priory lost many of its monks.
Exeter, with a population of three thousand lost 1900 dead. The total
of deaths in the country was estimated to be two and three quarter
millions. A certain professor Theobald Rogers calculated the number of
deaths worldwide as 25 million. Europe lost half its population. Izacke
wrote of Exeter, 'The Plague of Pestilence reigned here almost three
Years Space'.
The Black Death was a calamity of colossal magnitude. Up to that time,
nothing in the history of the world was comparable to it. It stood
alone for its awful fatality.
Written by Margaret Ball
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