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  1. Outbreak part of the ongoing second plague pandemic since the 14th century. Cause. Yersinia pestis. Deaths. 19,900+ [1] From 1592 to 1593, London experienced its last major plague outbreak of the 16th century. During this period, at least 15,000 people died of plague within the City of London and another 4,900 died of plague in the surrounding ...

    • August 1592 – December 1593, with cases until 1595
    • Several years
  2. The Great Plague of London, lasting from 1665 to 1666, was the last major epidemic of the bubonic plague to occur in England. It happened within the centuries-long Second Pandemic , a period of intermittent bubonic plague epidemics that originated in Central Asia in 1331 (the first year of the Black Death ), and included related diseases such ...

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  4. After the Black Death, the main plague epidemics occurred in 1563, 1593, 1625 and 1665. The first, in 1563, probably caused the greatest proportional mortality of all the London outbreaks, accounting for one-quarter to one-third of the city's population: probably as many as 18,000 people died.

    • 1592–1593 London plague1
    • 1592–1593 London plague2
    • 1592–1593 London plague3
    • 1592–1593 London plague4
    • 1592–1593 London plague5
  5. Apr 12, 2024 · Great Plague of London, epidemic of plague that ravaged London, England, from 1665 to 1666. City records indicate that some 68,596 people died during the epidemic, though the actual number of deaths is suspected to have exceeded 100,000 out of a total population estimated at 460,000. The outbreak.

  6. Oct 28, 2009 · Biology of Plagues - March 2001. We saw in Chapter 6 that plague broke out sporadically in London throughout the 16th century, each epidemic lasting about 9 months during the spring, summer and autumn but it was persistent from 1578 (when there were 3568 plague deaths) to 1582 (2976 plague deaths) and then exploded again at the end of the century in 1593 (10 662 plague deaths) an outbreak that ...

    • Susan Scott, Christopher J. Duncan
    • 2001
  7. In 1563, London experienced its worst episode of plague during the sixteenth century. At least 20,136 people in London and surrounding parishes were recorded to have died of plague during the outbreak. [2] Around 24% of London's population ultimately perished, [3] but the plague affected London's unsanitary parishes and neighbourhoods the most. [4]

  8. Among the reformers who had now become the establishment in the Church and City, plays, and their strange bedfellow of large unorthodox religious gatherings, both potentially gave rise it seems to the spirit of enthusiasm which bred sedition as well as plague. In the next large London plague outbreak of 1592-3, Bishop Aylmer declared his unease ...

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