An ancient outbreak of bubonic plague may have been exaggerated

Archaeological evidence suggests a sixth century epidemic didn’t radically change European history

plague

A sixth century Eurasian plague, depicted in this painting as suddenly striking the Italian man on the left, was nowhere near as deadly and politically destabilizing as many scholars have assumed, an analysis indicates.

Josse Lieferinxe/Walters Art Museum (CC0)

An ancient bubonic plague outbreak often characterized as a mass killer that felled Eurasian civilizations was actually pretty tame, researchers say.