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  1. In March 1820, the disease was identified in Siam, in May 1820 it had spread as far as Bangkok and Manila; in July the outbreak torched Vietnam; in spring of 1821 it reached Java, Oman, and Anhai in China; in 1822 it was found in Japan, in the Persian Gulf, in Baghdad, in Syria, and in the Transcaucasus; and in 1823 cholera reached Astrakhan ...

    • South Asia, South-East Asia, Middle East
    • Cholera
  2. www.history.com › topics › inventionsCholera - HISTORY

    Sep 12, 2017 · The First Cholera Pandemic. The first cholera pandemic emerged out of the Ganges Delta with an outbreak in Jessore, India, in 1817, stemming from contaminated rice. The disease quickly...

  3. Cholera Epidemics in the 19th Century. First appearing in Europe and North America beginning in 1831–1832 and presumed to have come from India, epidemic cholera returned and traveled around the world many times through the end of the century, killing many thousands. Causing profuse and violent cramps, vomiting and diarrhea, with dehydration ...

  4. The first cholera pandemic, though previously restricted, began in Bengal, and then spread across India by 1820. Hundreds of thousands of Indians and ten thousand British troops died during this pandemic. [11]

  5. By 1820 epidemics had been reported in Siam (Thailand), in Indonesia (where more than 100,000 people succumbed on the island of Java alone), and as far away as the Philippines. At Basra, Iraq, as many as 18,000 people died during a three-week period in 1821. The pandemic spread through Turkey and reached the threshold of Europe.

  6. During the nineteenth century, five cholera pandemics swept through India, Asia, Europe, and North America, infecting huge segments of the population and killing millions of people; a pandemic is defined as an epidemic encompassing a wide geographical area.

  7. During the same period the pestilence moved ward, reaching the East African shore in 1820, spreading over potamia and Persia, and in 1823, extending to Tiflis, Baku, khan, the gateway to Russia and the West. This disease showed resemblance to the cholera, or bilious flux, described in works. Hippocrates to Sydenham, and so the scourge was named.

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