The Travel of Disease
Jackie Kahn
Human mobility, in terms of European
transcontinental exploration and colonization, began to truly flourish after
the 1400s. This travel, inspired by financial motives and justified by
religious goals, resulted in the European dominance and decimation of countless
cultures in both the Americas and Eurasia. While at first glance it seems as
though this dominance was achieved through mainly military means - European militias,
like Spanish conquistadors, rolling over native tribes with their
technologically advanced weapons - the reality is significantly more complex.
The Europeans, most likely unknowingly, employed another, equally deadly weapon
during their exploits. With their travel, they brought with them the infectious
diseases of their homelands, exposing the defenseless natives to foreign malady
that their bodies had no hope of developing immunities against. Because of the
nature of disease and their limited knowledge about its modes of infection, the
Europeans were able to dispense highly contagious and mortal illnesses while
limiting their contraction of any native ones to the new territories. In short,
they were able to kill without being killed. In this way, the travel of disease
in conjunction with the travel of humans in a search for exotic commodities was
able to limit or even halt the development of some cultures while allowing
others to flourish at exponential rates.
Before
discussing how disease has shaped history and altered cultures, it is important
to understand how they themselves have developed and changed throughout
history. Disease, in the broadest definition of the word, has been present
since the beginning of humanity. Even hunter and gathering societies have been
documented as being effected by parasites and intestinal worms (Ponting, 225).
However, disease on the epidemic scale did not appear till certain conditions
existed, conditions created namely by the Agricultural Revolution. As
communities became more sedentary and developed a more stable means of food
production through the domestication of animals and irrigation processes,
populations were able to increase at exponential rates, one of the fundamental
prerequisites for an epidemic outbreak. An increased population translated into
closer living conditions, less sanitary means of waste disposal due to sheer
volume, and typically, poorer nutrition, making people more susceptible to a breakdown
of the immune system. A higher population, in comparison to that of their
hunting and gathering predecessors, meant a greater chance for contracting an
illness. Equally important, the Agricultural Revolution demanded the
domestication of animals. In living in close proximity to cattle, hogs, and
other useful livestock, a phenomenon known as species cross-over took place.
This species cross-over refers to the mutation of diseases typically found in
livestock to a new form that seeks out a human host. The most classic and
devastating example is small pox, a highly fatal disease that causes sores to
form on the body and known in cattle as cowpox (Ponting, 225-226). This,
coupled with irrigation, providing a host for water-born diseases like malaria
and schistosomiasis, sheds a bit of light on the magnitude of the influence of
the Agricultural Revolution on the evolution of disease. Whereas previously
disease consisted of small, easily contained outbreaks that killed a small
portion of a tribe at most, post- Agricultural Revolution, the world became
exposed to epidemics that had the capabilities to take out nearly 1/3 of a
population without even the possibility of finding a cure or hoping for
containment.
Once
species cross-over had taken place, there was a significant period of time
where no new diseases appeared. Smallpox, measles, and other diseases continued
to reek their havoc, but for the most part Europe would not be introduced to
many new forms of illness. That is, not until travel and trade began to become
a major source of business for the rising middle class of European society. After
being ravaged by the Black Plague, the people of Europe found themselves with a
readily available capital – from the deaths of so many in power – and a
developing taste for the finer things in life – as reflected in the sumptuary
laws passed throughout Europe. The entrepreneurs emerging in the middle class were
quick to act on these new desires, resulting in the development of a merchant
class. Beginning simply with trade mainly amongst the European nations, the
lucrative prospect of spices in Asia, silks and ivories in Africa, and gold in
the Americas, these merchants organized more elaborate excursions with more
elaborate means. Once in the Eastern Oceans, the European merchants did not
limit themselves to Western trade. The truly business-minded from Portugal, the
Netherlands, and England began to serve as middlemen, facilitating trade
between Asian nations (Cippola, 136). This new attitude toward trade was not
inevitable. It was made possible only after certain shifts in both demographic
construct – the Malthusian relief of the Black Death – and in popular thought
about trade and exploration. Since medieval times, there has been an attempt
"to reconcile the antithesis between business and religion (Cippola,
132)," a search for a moral motive for the exploitative practices of
colonization. The best means for this reconciliation, as determined by the
leaders and thinkers of the Renaissance, was to liken colonization to an
extension of the Crusades, an attempt to right "the heathen ways" of
these "pagan tribes" and bring about their "salvation." It
is clear that kings sent explorers to new lands to fill their coffers, but what
is also apparent is that once in these new lands, "religious convictions nourished
boldness in battle, endurance through ordeals, truculence after victory
(Cippola, 132)." Whatever the religious guise that these motive may be
operating under, the economic prospects of spices, gold, and a new world of
global trade made exploration to these new places a priority. With the advent
of new technology that made these long sea excursions more economically
feasible, European strongholds like Portugal and Spain began to look to Asia,
Africa, and the Americas for new sources of wealth. This intense lure of wealth
coupled with a nationally funded sense of patriotism resulted in a decimation
of the natives in the exotic lands.
The Spanish
conquistadors and other empirically funded expeditions to the New Worlds were
not strictly interested in financial gains. A certain amount of national pride
had begun to support the shift from strictly business to exploration. With this
national pride came the spirit of conquest, an attitude that would lead to the
merciless exploitation of the native peoples in their paths. It has been argued
that the people native to the Americas were virtually disease-free, at least within
the European definition of the term. With little domestication of livestock,
they were not exposed to diseases like small pox and measles (Ponting, 226).
They more than likely experienced some forms of debilitating outbreaks – they
did have concentrated populations and advanced agricultural practices – but
their immunity to European diseases was non-existent. Therefore, conquistadors
were able to, even with only one member of a ship infected, wipe out huge
portions of the populations. The first plague to strike reached Hispanola in
1520, brought by Cortez’s troops in their battle against the Aztecs (Ponting,
230). Measles, typhus, and influenza, all diseases that were being limited to
childhood within Europe, were the next to strike. Although tough to estimate
true death tolls, the most reliable figures suggest that a combination of war
and disease shrank the population in the valley of Mexico from 25 million in
pre-1500, to 6 million in the mid-16th century, and down to 1
million in 1600. Through contaminated blankets and clothing, physical contact,
and simpler cohabitation, the Europeans were able to eliminate entire cultures
almost inactively. And surprisingly, they were able to avoid similar effects on
their own populations.
Disease traveling back to Europe
from the colonized countries and trade partners was fairly limited. Except for
the notable exception of the Black Death, there was no devastating disease to
rack Europe that did not originate there, especially not from the New World.
Why is it that that they were able to reap the benefits of foreign diseases on
the enemies without paying similar costs? For the most part, there are a few
obvious answers. There are some experts who argue that Europe did experience a
transfer of disease back to the Continent, citing syphilis as the main example
(Ponting, 231). However, others have said that it is a mutation of another
disease known as yaws, known throughout Europe long before transatlantic
exploration. And syphilis provides the strongest case for the reverse travel of
disease despite its controversy. Ponting points to other reasons that a
transfer of disease back to Europe was not as prevalent. A fairly obvious
reason he cites is the temperature difference in Europe and the Americas (Ponting,
231). Europe’s climate was fairly cool in comparison and therefore could not
breed the types of illnesses that were native to the Americas. This in and of
itself is probably not enough to combat the spread of new disease. After the
devastation of the Black Death, the Europeans had learned a few things about
the nature of contagions. By limiting travel they were able to limit exposure
while still dispensing infested blankets. Cippola notes the tendency of
Europeans to be stronger militarily at sea rather than on land. This phenomenon
seems to translate to their behaviors on new soil. He notes the powers of
Europe at sea – with colonization – and their devastation on land – with the
Turks (Cippola, 140). In the New World, the explorers remained close to the
coast, limiting their interactions. Their strong-holds were all naval bases,
never deep within the conquered lands. The same was true within Asia. “The few
Europeans who ventured into the hinterland were rapidly killed or incapacitated
by malaria, tropical fevers, disease, and lethal climate (Cippola, 142).” By
limiting their travel and therefore their physical interaction, they were able
to limit the disease they carried back with them to Europe. This combined with
public health measures that limited travel of sailors after trips abroad
significantly limited any exposure of new diseases to the large public of
Europe. If any new illnesses were brought over, they were contained and quelled
before they had a chance to spread.
Disease has plagued the world since
the beginning of time. Only recently has modern medicine been able to scratch
the surface of what causes death in humans, and even now, we are perplexed by
many ailments. In fact, through out time, public health measures have only
limited the spread of disease, never fully prevented it. But it is exactly
these public health measures, so strongly influenced by the concept of travel,
that have prevented many outbreaks. Beginning in the 1300s with the Black
Death, decrees prevented travel in hopes of containing the disease. Later,
after the age of exploration, quarantine again was implemented to limit the
spread of new diseases. And as Cippola notes, it is probably the limited travel
restricted to the coastlines that prevented the contraction of many of these
New World diseases in the first place. Nonetheless, travel, be it limiting it
within countries or encouraging it in new lands, has influenced the spread of
cultures and simultaneously the spread of disease