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  1. www.history.com › topics › inventionsCholera - HISTORY

    Sep 12, 2017 · By 1820, cholera had spread to Thailand, Indonesia (killing 100,000 people on the island of Java alone) and the Philippines. From Thailand and Indonesia, the disease made its way to China in...

  2. 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.

  3. Aug 16, 2019 · Within a year of the first epidemic, which began in the town of Jessore in what is now western Bangladesh, most of British India had experienced outbreaks of varying severity. 1 By the early 1820s, cholera had spread by sea and land to other Asian countries, later arriving in Africa, Europe, and the Americas. 2 It defined the contours of a new w...

  4. The cholera pandemics of the nineteenth century had a devastating effect on much of the world. Britain lost an estimated 130,000 people over the course of five epidemics. In India, cholera claimed more than 25 million lives from the 1800s to the early part of the twentieth century.

  5. 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.

  6. Jul 17, 2015 · The Pandemics. Cholera seems to have first appeared in India and may have been endemic there causing outbreaks as far back as the 16th century. In 1817, however, a particularly virulent outbreak struck in Eastern India in the state of Bengal and quickly spread to other parts of the subcontinent.

  7. 1. Pandemics. The first cholera pandemic occurred in the Bengal region of India, near Calcutta (now Kolkata), starting in 1817 through 1824. The disease dispersed from India to Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and Eastern Africa through trade routes. [ 1] .

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