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The
bacteria was found to enter through the eyes.
Or, was
it a chemical exposure that entered through the eyes?
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The bubonic plague
A devastating civil war in China between the established
Chinese population and the Mongol hordes raged between 1205
and 1353.
| I saw a 1944 Japanese movie: "The Most
Beautiful" in which the school girls working for the
war effort were marching and singing a song with
words as follows: In the summer of 1281 the
Mongols rose against the Chinese as an invasion ...
100,000 strong |
Asian outbreak
The central Asian scenario agrees with
the first reports of outbreaks in China in the early
1330s. The plague struck the Chinese province of Hubei
in 1334. During 1353–54, more widespread disaster
occurred. Chinese accounts of this wave of the disease
record a spread to eight distinct areas: Hubei, Jiangxi,
Shanxi, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Henan and Suiyuan (a
historical Chinese province that now forms part of Hubei
and Nei Mongul provinces), throughout the Mongol/Chinese
empires. Historian
William McNeill noted that voluminous Chinese
records on disease and social disruption survive from
this period, but that modern scholars in neither the
East nor the West have studied these sources in depth.
It appears that movement by the Mongols
and merchant caravans inadvertently brought the plague
from central Asia to the Middle East and Europe. The
plague was reported in the trading cities of
Constantinople and Trebizond in 1347. In that same year
the Genoese possession of Caffa, a cathedral city and
seaport on the Crimean peninsula in modern day Ukraine,
came under siege by an army of Crimean Tatar warriors
under the command of Janibeg, backed by Venetian forces.
Their objective was disruption of a trading empire Genoa
had established in Caffa.
In 1347, a terrible sickness began to
strike the besieging army. According to accounts, so
many died that the survivors had little time to bury
them and bodies were stacked like cords of firewood
against the city walls. Although the Tatar/Venetian
alliance broke off the siege, the disease had already
spread to the city.
So, there was a
war going on in China
When trade
ships from Orient came back to Europe in 1347-1349
Maybe the wind
blew the bomb fumes & that was the exposure?
... to a
chemical that caused
flu-symptoms
and lymph nodes
to swell up like black walnuts ...
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1918 Flu
This was during
the First World War
The 'Spanish Flu'
Maybe a chemical poisoning?
2-21-06
Why is Autism Epidemic in China today?
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