The Epidemics of the Middle Ages by J. F. C. Hecker and John Caius
1821. La Chapelle, Saint-Pierre and sixty places around. (Oise; Seine
1890 words | Chapter 65
et Oise.)
SECT. 3.—THE ROETTINGEN SWEATING SICKNESS.
We now come to a phenomenon which, notwithstanding its short duration
and very limited extension, is one of the most memorable of this
century. Up to the present time, its real importance has not been
recognised, because the clouds of self-sufficient ignorance have
prevented our taking a survey of the formation of diseases, throughout
long periods of time. It has been sunk for an age in the sea of
oblivion, from whence we will now draw it forth to the light of day.
In November, 1802, a very hot and dry summer had been succeeded by
incessant rain. Thick fogs spread over the country, and enveloped such
places in central Germany as were inaccessible to ventilation. Amongst
others, the small Franconian town of Roettingen, situated on the river
Tauber, and surrounded by mountains[863]. Scarcely had a few weeks
elapsed, when unexpectedly, towards the 25th of November, an extremely
fatal disease broke out in the town, which was without example in the
memory of its inhabitants, and totally unknown to the physicians of the
country.
Strong vigorous young men were suddenly seized with _unspeakable
dread_; the heart became _agitated_ and _beat violently against_ the
ribs, a _profuse, sour, ill-smelling perspiration_ broke out over
the whole body, and at the same time, they experienced a _lacerating
pain_ in the nape of the neck, as if a violent rheumatic fever had
taken possession of the tendinous tissues. This pain ceased sometimes
very quickly, and if it then shifted to the chest, the distressing
palpitation of the heart recommenced; a spasmodic trembling of the
whole body ensued; the sufferers fainted, their limbs became rigid,
and thus they breathed their last. _In most cases, all this occurred
within four and twenty hours._ They did not all, however, succumb under
the first attack, but as soon as the accelerated pulse had sunk to the
lowest ebb of smallness and feebleness, a corresponding effect being
observable in the respiration, the violent pain would in some cases
return to the outward parts. The patient then felt a benumbing pressure
and stiffness in the nape of the neck; and the pulse and respiration
became restored again as in health, but the perspiration continued to
pour incessantly down the skin.
This apparent safety was, however, very deceptive, for a renewed
palpitation of the heart unexpectedly commenced, accompanied by a
feeble pulse; and then death was often inevitable. It was remarkable,
that the patients, though bathed in perspiration, had very little
thirst, and the tongue was not dry, nor ever even foul, but retained
its natural moisture. With most, however, the urine was scanty; as
the skin, under the increasing debility, permitted too much fluid to
stream forth through its pores. _If the disease passed off without
heating sudorifics, then in general no eruption made its appearance._
The malady then continued till the sixth day, but on the first only,
did it display its malignant symptoms, for by the second, the sweating
diminished and lost every unfavourable quality, so that increased
transpiration of the skin, without any other symptoms of importance,
alone remained, and on the sixth day the patient was perfectly
restored.
Had there been in Roettingen a physician at hand from the commencement,
_well skilled in medical history_, and who would have adopted the old
English treatment of the Sweating Sickness, this new fever would have
appeared but as a perfectly mild disease, and would certainly have
carried off but few of the inhabitants of this peaceful little town.
As it was, however, the scenes of Lübeck and Zwickau were renewed,
and it seemed as if the innumerable victims to the hot treatment, and
to _Kegeler’s_ truculent medical work, had descended to the grave in
vain. _The sufferers were, as in the sixteenth century, literally
stewed to death!_ for the moment the people imagined that they knew
how nature meant to escape, they ordered feather-beds to be heaped
on the perspiring patient, so that the mouth and nose alone remained
uncovered. Doors and windows were tightly closed, and the stove emitted
a glowing heat, whilst a most intolerable odour of perspiration
streamed forth from beneath the broad and lofty beds; added to which,
that two and even more patients were often lying in the same room;
nay, even stowed together under the same mountain of feathers, and in
order that inward heat might not be wanting, pots of theriaca were
swallowed, and the patient was incessantly plied with elder electuary.
Thus the bad humours were expelled together with the perspiration;
and whether the sufferers were suffocated, or surmounted, as by a
miracle, this mal-treatment of nature, a conviction was felt, that the
most salutary remedies had been employed, and when at last, eruptions
of various colours broke out, it was considered as certain, that the
poison had been carried off in them. The citizens of Roettingen,
therefore, fell into the same erroneous opinion, which, upheld by
medical schools, had, time immemorial, increased inflammatory diseases,
particularly the exanthematous, and caused them to become malignant.
The above-mentioned eruptions were of various sorts; miliary vesicles
of every form and colour, filled with an acrid fluid; actual blistery
eruptions, (pemphigus,) and even petechiæ; and it is to be observed,
that the patients, during the first days of the sweating fever, never
suffered from that peculiar pricking sensation over the whole body,
which precedes the eruption of miliaria, but complained only, and that
not always, of a local itching, where the eruption had broken out. It
was equally rare to observe a regular desquamation of the skin, and it
is therefore to be assumed, that _the eruptions were only symptomatic_,
and not by any means necessarily connected with the disease, as in the
decidedly miliary fevers.
The disease excited, from its very commencement, the greatest
consternation; and as it was increased, even from the first days of
its appearance, by the sudorific system of treatment, deaths were
multiplied; the continual peal of funeral bells struck mortal terror,
as of old at Shrewsbury, into the hearts of both sick and healthy; and
this oppressed little town was shunned as a pesthole by the inhabitants
of the surrounding neighbourhood. At the commencement of the disease,
they were entirely without medical advice, till a skilful physician
arrived from the vicinity[864], and as _most of the inhabitants_ were
already attacked with the sweating fever, he immediately prescribed
the proper treatment. But the powers of one man are not sufficient,
amid such confusion, to contend with the deeply rooted prejudices of
the people, and so they continued in most houses to expel by heat and
theriaca both perspiration and life together; till at last, on the
third of December, _Dr. Sinner_ of Würzburg arrived, without whom the
remembrance of this remarkable disease would have been obliterated, and
conjointly with his gallant colleague, like the anonymous physician
formerly in Zwickau, subdued the destructive prejudices of the people.
He found eighty-four patients[865] under piles of feather-beds, who,
when pure air was admitted, breathed once more freely, and by a prudent
cooling system, all recovered easily, and without danger, one only
excepted. His method reminds us of the old English treatment[866].
The disease was confined entirely to Roettingen, it did not make its
appearance anywhere beyond the gates of this little town. On the fifth
of December, however, clear, frosty weather set in; from that time no
new cases occurred, and all traces of this Roettingen sweating fever,
which was never either preceded or followed by miliary fever in any
part of Franconia, have from that time disappeared.
The resemblance of this fever to the English Sweating Sickness is
manifest, and is proved even by the short (_only ten days’_) duration
of the visitation, which, as we have stated, is a most essential
characteristic of the English sweating epidemic, at least as it
appeared in Germany, the miliary epidemics always having lasted a much
longer period. But if we confine ourselves merely to the symptoms of
the disease, we shall find, that in the Roettingen sweating fever,
there are, throughout, none that can be considered essential, except
the _palpitation of the heart, accompanied with anguish_, the _profuse
perspiration_, and the _rheumatic pains in the nape of the neck_,
which never were wanting in any case; and the very same symptoms are
clearly and perceptibly to be discerned in like proportion as compared
with others, in the representation of the English Sweating Sickness;
whereas, the eruptions were altogether as unessential as in the
epidemic of the sixteenth century. The irritability of the skin, and
tendency to dangerous metastases, were less marked in the Roettingen
fever than in the English Sweating Sickness; for the patients could,
without injury, change their linen in the midst of the perspiration,
which, in the English Sweating Sickness, could not have been done
without fatal consequences; but this difference can easily be accounted
for, from the greater degree of suffering in the latter disease than in
the former. It only now remains to examine the duration of the disease,
and here we plainly perceive that the principal paroxysm was over in
the Roettingen epidemic within the first four and twenty hours, at
least when it was undisturbed by treatment; and the sole symptom which
continued until the sixth day—the increased perspiration, (we speak
here only of perfectly pure cases,) could only reasonably be regarded
as a sequela. The crisis did not occur all on a sudden, as in the
English Sweating Sickness, but this cannot constitute any essential
difference.
We do not hesitate, therefore, to pronounce _the Roettingen fever to
have been the same disease as the English Sweating Sickness_. To give,
however, this phenomenon its proper interpretation—to have a clear
conception of the causes which again drew down from the clouds, into
the midst of Germany, this mist-born spectre of 1529, and allowed it
to expend its brief fury upon a single place, is beyond the power
of human wisdom. Science is not comprehensive enough to discover, in
the crossings of these unknown comet-paths, the moving causes of this
visitation of disease. But as all insight into the works of nature must
be preceded by a strict investigation and search after phenomena in all
countries, at all times, and under all circumstances of development, so
an improved knowledge of diseases and of the whole human system, will
not fail to follow, when the investigations of epidemics throughout
extensive periods have increased in number and success.
_The present age demands such a knowledge of medical men, whose
vocation it is to investigate life minutely in all its bearings. It
demands of them an historical pathology, and to this branch of the
study of nature is the present work intended to contribute._
CHRONOLOGICAL SURVEY.
POLITICAL EVENTS. FIRST VISITATION OF THE SWEATING
SICKNESS.
1461–1483. Louis XI. 1472–1482. Swarms of locusts
1485–1509. Henry VII. in the south of Europe.
1493–1519. Maximilian I. 1480–1485. Wet years.
Mercenary troops are introduced. 1483. Overflow of the Severn,
(the _great water_ of the Duke
1483–1498. Charles VIII. of Buckingham.)
1483–1485. Richard III. 1480 and 1481. Famine in
1483, October. First abortive Germany and France.
attempt of the Earl of Richmond, 1477–1485. Glandular plague
(who had fled to France in Italy.
in 1471,) against Richard III. 1480, 1481. Encephalitis in
The Duke of Buckingham Germany.
executed. 1482. Febrile cerebritis in
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