Book contents
- The Yellow Flag
- Global Health Histories
- The Yellow Flag
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text and Translations
- Introduction
- Part I Mediterranean Currents
- Part II Lazarettos, Health Boards, and the Building of a Biopolity
- Part III Imagining the Plague
- Part IV Old Patterns, New Cordons
- 8 Quarantine and Empire
- 9 Mutually Assured Deconstruction
- Conclusion: Plagueomania
- Bibliography
- Index
Conclusion: Plagueomania
from Part IV - Old Patterns, New Cordons
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2020
- The Yellow Flag
- Global Health Histories
- The Yellow Flag
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text and Translations
- Introduction
- Part I Mediterranean Currents
- Part II Lazarettos, Health Boards, and the Building of a Biopolity
- Part III Imagining the Plague
- Part IV Old Patterns, New Cordons
- 8 Quarantine and Empire
- 9 Mutually Assured Deconstruction
- Conclusion: Plagueomania
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Did quarantine work and was it worth it? The enforcement of rigorous sanitation laws after the Marseille plague epidemic of the early eighteenth century did coincide with an epidemiological shift that left Western Europe (for the most part) free of the plague. While most quarantine procedures were irrelevant or gratuitous, the basic delays the system imposed clearly kept plague within lazarettos on several occasions when it otherwise could have spread further. As we have seen in the final chapter, the end of universal quarantine did not depend on anticontagionist persuasiveness or ideological change so much as it responded to the medical state of affairs in the Middle East.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Yellow FlagQuarantine and the British Mediterranean World, 1780–1860, pp. 278 - 281Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020