The 'Italian Plague of 1629-1631' was a series of outbreaks of
bubonic plague from
1629 through
1631 in northern
Italy. This
epidemic, often referred to as 'Great Plague of Milan', claimed the lives of approximately 280,000 people, with the cities of
Lombardy experiencing particularly high death rates. This episode is considered one of the last outbreaks of the centuries long
pandemic of bubonic plague which began with the
Black Death.
German and
French troops carried the plague to the city of
Mantua in 1629, as a result of troop movements associated with the
Thirty Years' War (
1618-
1648).
Venetian troops, infected with the disease, retreated into northern and central Italy, spreading the infection.
In October 1629, the plague reached
Milan, Lombardy's major commercial center. Although the city initiated effective public health measures, including
quarantine and limiting the access of German soldiers and trade goods, the plague smoldered. A major outbreak in March
1630 was due to relaxed health measures during the
carnival season. This was followed by a second wave in the spring and summer of 1631. Overall, Milan suffered approximately 60,000 fatalities out of a total population of 130,000.
East of Lombardy, the
Republic of Venice was infected in 1630-31. The city of
Venice was severely hit, with recorded casualties of 46,000 people out of a population of 140,000. Some historians believe the drastic loss of life, and its impact on commerce, ultimately resulted in the downfall of Venice as a major commercial and political power. The papal city of
Bologna lost an estimated 15,000 citizens to the plague, with neighboring smaller cities of
Modena and
Parma also being heavily affected. This outbreak of plague also spread north into
Tyrol, an alpine region of western
Austria and northern Italy.
Later outbreaks of bubonic plague in Italy include the city of
Florence in 1630-
1633 and the areas surrounding
Naples,
Rome and
Genoa in
1656-
1657.
Literature
The 1630 plague in Milan is the backdrop for several chapters of
Alessandro Manzoni's novel ''
The Betrothed'' (
Italian: ''I promessi sposi''). Although a work of fiction, Manzoni's description of the conditions and events in plague-ravaged Milan are completely historical and extensively documented from primary sources researched by Manzoni.
An expunged section of the book, describing the historical trial and execution of three alleged "plague-spreaders," was later published in a booklet entitled ''Storia della colonna infame'' (History of the infamous pillar).
See also
★
List of Bubonic plague outbreaks
★
Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute
References
★ Cipolla, Carlo M. ''Fighting the Plague in Seventeenth Century Italy''. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1981.
★ Prinzing, Freidrich. ''Epidemics Resulting from Wars''. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1916.