Malaria occurs in areas other than tropical ones. In the book, "Little House
on the Prairie", the whole family gets malaria and thankfully, a neighbor
drops by and is able to get them medicine. Oklahoma in the 1860-1870's.
Sharon C.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Julie
Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2008 3:06 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Subject: [h-cost] Tudors & Sweating Sickness (OT)


----  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
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> >There is substantial mention of a "sweating sickness" that killed 
> >thousands during Henry VIII's time.  What was that?  No mention of 
> >buboes like for plague or marks like smallpox.  Did this really 
> >happen or was it just part of their story?  It was very contagious 
> >and people were told to burn all clothing & bedding.  I believe 
> >consumption is tuberculosis, right?  Any other old disease names with 
> >modern equivalents I should know?
> >
> >I know the costumes were discussed when the show first came out  What 
> >I found most jarring was anything from the neck up.  The hairstyles 
> >were extremely modern.  Long hair was down & exposed.
> >Crowns & headgear, at least on the women, looked fantasy or Las Vegas.
> >
> >Julie in Ramona
> 
> The "sweating sickness" is one of those medical mysteries that we may 
> never be able to answer.  It was evidently a real sickness (there are 
> many references in contemporary letters and documents), but what 
> caused it is unknown.  It was evidently not plague or smallpox, both 
> of which have readily recognizable symptoms; it was not tuberculosis, 
> which does not kill in a few hours or days.  From the descriptions, it 
> sounds, to me, like it could have been a particularly virulent form of 
> influenza or even malaria.
> 
> Joan Jurancich
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
Interesting.  My daughter mentioned malaria but I told her it couldn't be
that because it's tropical.  Cholera was mentioned as well.  I was thinking
along the lines of the horrible influenza in the U.S. in 19...teens that
killed so many.  Wasn't it called the Spanish Influenza?

Julie
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