The Antonine Plague: An Unseen Catalyst for Rome's Decline

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The Antonine Plague (165-180 CE), likely smallpox, devastated the Roman Empire after troops brought it back from campaigns in the Near East. This pandemic, documented by physician Galen, killed an estimated 7-10 million people (10-15% of the Roman population), with up to 2,000 daily deaths in Rome alone. The plague's far-reaching consequences included agricultural collapse, a decline in tax revenue, military manpower shortages, and the disruption of imperial succession when Marcus Aurelius prematurely elevated his son Commodus after co-emperor Lucius Verus died from the disease.

The pandemic triggered profound societal changes: labor shortages led to wage inflation, the first significant debasement of the Roman currency occurred, and traditional religious practices gave way to mystery cults, such as Christianity. Archaeological evidence reveals mass graves, abandoned fortifications, and demographic collapse documented in Egyptian census records. Historians now view the Antonine Plague as a pivotal moment that permanently weakened Roman power, setting the stage for later crises and demonstrating how infectious diseases can fundamentally alter civilizations.

https://www.ihadnoclue.com/article/1125358760523104257

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