What Was Life Like in Plague-Ridden London?
The coronavirus pandemic of this year (and late last year) has sparked a renaissance of interest in the Great Plague of London which ravaged the city from 1665–1666. Valid similarities have been drawn between the two events, specifically regarding the suspension of large-scale public events. What many comparisons omit, however, is just how harsh life really was for a Londoner at the time and how a social view of the plague reveals unsettling truths about how the disease affected people of different classes.
The experience was far from universal. As with the current pandemic, social and medical determinants resulted in varying experiences depending on one’s class and location. This is demonstrated by the fact that although a standard plague mortality pattern consists of a steady increase in deaths followed by a steeper decline in deaths, some parts of London saw entirely different patterns. The parish of St. Katharine by the Tower saw an extended mortality pattern during the plague of 1609 and in 1665, the parish of All Hallows London saw an enteric mortality pattern, probably due to an infected water supply. While these differences are biological, social factors are also at play and understanding them…