History’s deadliest pandemics, from ancient Rome to modern America

Centuries before coronavirus, plague, smallpox, yellow fever and other contagions killed hundreds of millions around the world

The novel coronavirus took just a few months to sweep the globe. Nearly 5 million people around the world have died, including 700,000 in the United States. How many more will die, how countries will recover — the answers remain elusive as the delta variant rages and people in most countries remain unvaccinated. But history shows that past pandemics have reshaped societies in profound ways. Hundreds of millions of people have died. Empires have fallen. Governments have cracked. Generations have been annihilated. Here is a look at how pandemics have remade the world.

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

DEATHS FROM PANDEMICS, IN ANTIQUITY

Plague of Justinian

541-542 A.D.

30 to 50 million

Antonine Plague

165-180 A.D.

5 million

1900

1000

1100

1200

1300

1400

1500

1600

1700

1800

DEATHS IN THE MIDDLE AGES

Range of

estimate

Black Death

1347-1352

75 to 200 million

Great Plague of London

1665

75 to 100 thousand

New World

smallpox

1520-unknown

25 to 55 million

Italian Plague

1629-1631

1 million

Third Plague

1885

12 million

Russian flu

1889-1890

1 million

Yellow Fever

Late 1800s

150 thousand

1900

’10

’20

’30

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

2020

DEATHS IN THE MODERN ERA

Asian flu

1957-1958

1 million

1918 flu

1918-1920

50 million

Hong Kong flu

1968-1970

1 million

SARS

2002-2003

Less than

1 thousand

HIV/AIDS

1981-current

35 million

Swine flu

2009-unknown

200 thousand

MERS

2015

Less than

1 thousand

Ebola

2014-2016

11 thousand

COVID-19

2020-current

About

5 million

(as of Oct. 3)

About 700 thousand

in the U.S.

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

DEATHS FROM PANDEMICS, IN ANTIQUITY

Plague of Justinian

541-542 A.D.

30 to 50 million

Antonine Plague

165-180 A.D.

5 million

1900

1000

1100

1200

1300

1400

1500

1600

1700

1800

DEATHS IN THE MIDDLE AGES

Range of

estimate

Black Death

1347-1352

75 to 200 million

Great Plague of London

1665

75 to 100 thousand

New World

smallpox

1520-unknown

25 to 55 million

Italian Plague

1629-1631

1 million

Third Plague

1885

12 million

Yellow Fever

Late 1800s

150 thousand

Russian flu

1889-1890

1 million

1900

’10

’20

’30

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

2020

DEATHS IN THE MODERN ERA

Asian flu

1957-1958

1 million

1918 flu

1918-1920

50 million

Hong Kong flu

1968-1970

1 million

SARS

2002-2003

Less than

1 thousand

HIV/AIDS

1981-current

35 million

Swine flu

2009-unknown

200 thousand

MERS

2015

Less than

1 thousand

Ebola

2014-2016

11 thousand

COVID-19

2020-current

About 5 million

(as of Oct. 3)

About 700 thousand in the U.S.

1900 to

0

500

1000

1500

2020

DETAIL

BELOW

DEATHS FROM PANDEMICS, FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE MODERN ERA

Antonine Plague

165-180 A.D.

5 million

New World

smallpox

1520-unknown

25 to 55 million

Russian flu

1889-1890

1 million

Third Plague

1885

12 million

Black Death

1347-1352

75 to 200 million

Italian Plague

1629-1631

1 million

Yellow Fever

Late 1800s

150,000

Range of

estimate

Great Plague

of London

1665

75,000 to 100,000

Plague of Justinian

541-542 A.D.

30 to 50 million

1900

’10

’20

’30

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

2020

Hong Kong flu

1968-1970

1 million

SARS

2002-2003

Less than 1,000

Swine flu

2009-unknown

200,000

Ebola

2014-2016

11,000

HIV/AIDS

1981-current

35 million

1918 flu

1918-1920

50 million

MERS

2015

Less than 1,000

COVID-19

2020-current

About 5 million

(as of Oct. 3)

Asian flu

1957-1958

1 million

About

700 thousand in the U.S.

1900

2020

0

500

1000

1500

DETAIL

BELOW

DEATHS FROM PANDEMICS, FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE MODERN ERA

Antonine Plague

165-180 A.D.

5 million

New World

smallpox

1520-unknown

25 to 55 million

Russian flu

1889-1890

1 million

Third Plague

1885

12 million

Black Death

1347-1352

75 to 200 million

Italian Plague

1629-1631

1 million

Yellow fever

Late 1800s

150,000

Range of

estimate

Plague of Justinian

541-542 A.D.

30 to 50 million

Great Plague

of London

1665

75,000 to 100,000

1900

’10

’20

’30

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

2020

Ebola

2014-2016

11,000

SARS

2002-2003

Less than 1,000

Asian flu

1957-1958

1 million

HIV/AIDS

1981-current

35 million

1918 flu

1918-1920

50 million

MERS

2015

Less than 1,000

Hong Kong flu

1968-1970

1 million

COVID-19

2020-current

About 5 million

(as of Oct. 3)

Swine flu

2009-unknown

200,000

About 700 thousand in the U.S.

1900

’10

’20

’30

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

2020

1900

2020

0

500

1000

1500

DETAIL

ON RIGHT

DEATHS FROM PANDEMICS, FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE MODERN ERA

Antonine Plague

165-180 A.D.

5 million

New World

smallpox

1520-unknown

25 to 55 million

SARS

2002-2003

Less than 1,000

1918 flu

1918-1920

50 million

Russian flu

1889-1890

1 million

MERS

2015

Less than 1,000

Asian flu

1957-1958

1 million

Third Plague

1885

12 million

Black Death

1347-1352

75 to 200 million

Swine flu

2009-unknown

200,000

Hong Kong flu

1968-1970

1 million

Italian Plague

1629-1631

1 million

Yellow fever

Late 1800s

150,000

Ebola

2014-2016

11,000

Range of

estimate

Great Plague

of London

1665

75,000 to 100,000

Plague of Justinian

541-542 A.D.

30 to 50 million

HIV/AIDS

1981-current

35 million

COVID-19

2020-current

About 5 million

(as of Oct. 3)

About 700 thousand in the U.S.

1900

’10

’20

’30

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

2020

1000

1100

1200

1300

1400

1500

1600

1700

1800

1900

2020

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

DETAIL

ON RIGHT

DEATHS FROM PANDEMICS, FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE MODERN ERA

Antonine Plague

165-180 A.D.

5 million

Third Plague

1885

12 million

New World

smallpox

1520-unknown

25 to 55 million

SARS

2002-2003

Less than 1,000

Swine flu

2009-unknown

200,000

1918 flu

1918-1920

50 million

Black Death

1347-1352

75 to 200 million

MERS

2015

Less than 1,000

Ebola

2014-2016

11,000

Russian flu

1889-1890

1 million

Plague of Justinian

541-542 A.D.

30 to 50 million

Asian flu

1957-1958

1 million

Italian Plague

1629-1631

1 million

Yellow fever

Late 1800s

150,000

COVID-19

2020-current

About

5 million

(as of Oct. 3)

HIV/AIDS

1981-current

35 million

Range of

estimate

Hong Kong flu

1968-1970

1 million

Great Plague of London

1665

75,000 to 100,000

About 700 thousand in the U.S.

165-180 A.D.

Antonine Plague

Deaths: 5 million • Cause: Measles and smallpox

In "The Plague in Rome," painted in 1869, artist Jules Elie Delaunay creates an allegorical representation of the scourge breaking down doors. (Photo Josse/Leemage/Corbis via Getty Images)

Many historians trace the fall of the Roman empire back to the Antonine Plague, which swept Rome during the reign of Marcus Aurelius. Nobody has ever nailed down the exact cause, but symptoms recorded by a physician named Galen — gruesome skin sores, high fever, diarrhea and sore throats — strongly suggest it was smallpox and measles. How’d it get there? Armies and tradesman returning from Asia. More than 2,000 people died daily. “The ancient world,” one scholar wrote, “never recovered from the blow inflicted upon it by the plague.”

541-542 A.D.

Plague of Justinian

Deaths: 30-50 million • Source: Rats and fleas

Josse Lieferinxe's "Saint Sebastian Interceding for the Plague Stricken," ca. 1497, depicts Saint Sebastian kneeling to pray before God on behalf of people suffering from or killed by the plague. (Josse Lieferinxe/The Walters Art Museum)

Thought to be the world’s first episode of bubonic plague, its namesake was the Byzantine emperor who was in power when it hit, likely arriving in the form of infected fleas hitching rides across the world on the backs of rodents. Frank M. Snowden, a Yale historian who studies pandemics, wrote in his book “Epidemics and Society” that definitive accounts of this plague have largely vanished. However, diaries from Procopius, a noted historian back then, indicate that many thought the end of civilization was upon them. “A pestilence,” Procopius wrote of the plague, “by which the whole human race was near to being annihilated.” Researchers are still digging up evidence connected to the plague all these years later. “Scientists working in Bavaria in 2005,” Snowden wrote, “identified the plague bacillus in skeletal remains from a sixth-century cemetery at Ascheim, strongly suggesting that the traditional diagnosis of bubonic plague is accurate.”

1347-1352

Black Death

Deaths: 75-200 million • Source: Rats and fleas

The plague in Tournai, then part of France, as depicted in "The Annales of Gilles de Muisit" from the mid-14th century. (Photo 12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

History Today, a monthly magazine of historical writing published in London, calls this pandemic “the greatest catastrophe ever.” The number of deaths — 200 million — is just astounding. Put it this way: That would be like wiping out roughly 65 percent of the current U.S. population. Like the Plague of Justinian, the Black Death was caused by the bubonic plague. The swift spread of the disease continues to astonish historians and epidemiologists. “The central explanation lies within characteristic features of medieval society in a dynamic phase of modernization heralding the transformation from a medieval to early modern European society,” Ole J. Benedictow, a University of Oslo historian, wrote in History Today. Big ships carried goods across ever-widening shipping routes throughout Europe and beyond. “This system for long-distance trade was supplemented by a web of lively short and medium-distance trade that bound together populations all over the Old World,” Benedictow wrote, dubbing this the “golden age of bacteria.”

1520-unknown

New World smallpox

Deaths: 25-55 million • Cause: Variola virus

Explorers arrived to the New World bearing more than just turnips and grapes. They also brought smallpox, measles and other viruses for which New World inhabitants had no immunity. “Although we may never know the exact magnitudes of the depopulation, it is estimated that upwards of 80–95 percent of the Native American population was decimated within the first 100–150 years following 1492,” according to a 2010 paper in the Journal of Economic Perspectives. “Historian and demographer [Noble] David Cook estimates that, in the end, the regions least affected lost 80 percent of their populations; those most affected lost their full populations; and a typical society lost 90 percent of its population.”

1665

Great Plague of London

Deaths: 75,000-100,000 • Source: Rats and fleas

An engraving ca. 1880, likely from Cassell's "Illustrated History of England," depicts the streets during the Great Plague of London in 1665. (Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Again, blame the rats with those pesky fleas on their backs: “They were attracted by city streets filled with rubbish and waste, especially in the poorest areas,” according to the National Archives in England. While doctors, lawyers and royalty fled town, the poor were ravaged by the disease. “Watchmen locked and kept guard over infected houses,” the National Archives said. “Parish officials provided food. Searchers looked for dead bodies and took them at night to plague pits for burial.” There were no treatments. If you caught it, you had roughly two weeks to live. This caused people to become desperate. “Sometimes, patients were bled with leeches,” the National Archives said. “People thought impure air caused the disease and could be cleansed by smoke and heat. Children were encouraged to smoke to ward off bad air. Sniffing a sponge soaked in vinegar was also an option.”

1817-1923

The cholera pandemics

Deaths: 1 million • Cause: V. cholerae bacteria

Few societies have been spared by this highly infectious bacteria, which is transmitted via feces-contaminated water and causes severe diarrhea and vomiting. The epidemic that swept London in 1854 spawned the sort of epidemiological investigations that take place in disease outbreaks today. That’s thanks to John Snow, an English physician who almost single-handedly took on the bacteria. While some scientists suspected cholera was transmitted through the air, Snow thought otherwise. “Through carefully mapping the outbreak, he finds that everyone affected has a single connection in common: they have all retrieved water from the local Broad Street pump,” according to a CDC history. He ordered the pump-handle turned off, and people stopped getting sick.

Late 1800s

Yellow fever

Deaths: 150,000 • Source: Mosquitoes

"En Route for Kansas — Fleeing From the Yellow Fever," by Sol Eytinge, ca. 1879. (Library of Congress/Library of Congress)

This viral infection is endemic to South America and sub-Saharan Africa. Spread by female mosquitoes, the disease gets its name because it often turns the skin of sufferers a distinct shade of yellow. In 1793, yellow fever swept through Philadelphia, then the nation’s capital, killing roughly 10 percent of the population. President George Washington and Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson high-tailed it out of town, ultimately settling on Washington as the nation’s capital. Back then, nobody knew exactly how and why people came down with yellow fever. It wasn’t until 1900 that U.S. Army researchers “pinpointed mosquitoes as the transmission vector for the disease,” according to a vaccine history project at the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.

1918-1920

The 1918 flu

Deaths: 50 million • Cause: H1N1

An influenza ward at the Walter Reed Hospital in Washington on Nov. 1, 1918. (Library of Congress/Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division)

The covid-19 pandemic has inspired lots of comparisons to the 1918 flu, sometimes called the Spanish flu, which got its name not because it originated in Spain but because it was World War I, and Spain was the only country being honest about the toll the pandemic took on the country. The flu came in two waves, starting in 1918 and ending in 1920. The number of infected is staggering —as many as 500 million, with estimates of 50 million deaths worldwide, according to the CDC. Isolation and quarantines were used to slow down transmission. Even President Woodrow Wilson was stricken, nearly derailing talks at the Paris Peace Conference, where the flu left him bedridden for days.

1957-1958

Asian flu

Deaths: 1 million • Cause: H2N2

Lt. Frank C. Morrison, a doctor on the destroyer Huntington — where half of the crew had been stricken with Asian flu — checks the temperatures of crewmen G.R. McKay, center, and M. Kosmides before they go ashore on liberty in Norfolk, Va., on Aug. 23, 1957. (AP/AP)

One man saw it coming: Maurice Hilleman. The doctor later regarded as the godfather of vaccines was working at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in 1957 when he read a New York Times article about a nasty flu outbreak in Hong Kong that mentioned glassy-eyed children at a clinic. “Something about their eyes tipped him off,” according to Smithsonian Magazine. “His gut told him that these deaths meant the next big flu pandemic.” Hilleman requested samples of the virus be shipped to U.S. drugmakers right away so they could get a vaccine ready. Though 70,000 people in the United States ultimately died, “some predicted that the U.S. death toll would have reached 1 million without the vaccine that Hilleman called for,” according to the Philadelphia vaccine history project. “Health officials widely credited that vaccine with saving many lives.”

2009

Swine flu

Deaths: 200,000 • Cause: H1N1

A crane lifts culled pigs into a container on a farm where 80 pigs died of swine fever on March 4, 2006 in Haltern, Germany. (VOLKER HARTMANN/DDP/AFP via Getty Images)

Before covid-19, this was the world’s most recent pandemic, infecting as much as 21 percent of the world’s population. Swine flu was a hodgepodge of several different flu strains that had never been collectively seen together. Most of those infected by swine flu were children and young adults, with older people — those most at-risk of dying from the flu — immune to it already.

2020

COVID-19

Deaths: 4.8 million • Cause: novel coronavirus

This undated transmission electron microscope image shows SARS-CoV-2, also known as novel coronavirus, the virus that causes COVID-19, isolated from a patient in the U.S. (Niaid-Rml/Via Reuters)

In late December of 2019, a series of mysterious pneumonia cases were reported in Wuhan, a city of 11 million people in central China. Initially, Chinese health officials said there was no human-to-human transmission, but that assessment quickly came into question as cases doubled and then tripled. Wuhan went on lockdown, but by then it was too late — cases were now showing up in Thailand and beyond. By March of 2020, the virus had spread to nearly every corner of the world, with entire nations under stay-at-home orders. Schools shifted to online learning. Workplaces transitioned to Zoom. On March 11, the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic.

The disease has spared nobody. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and U.S President Donald Trump were both hospitalized with covid-19. Late last year, hope arrived in the form of vaccines. So far, however, only about 44 percent of the world is vaccinated, according to Our World in Data, a consortium of researchers led by the University of Oxford. That number is dramatically lower in poorer countries, where only 2.3 percent of the population has received at least one dose. The United States ranks at the bottom of G-7 countries for vaccinations.

An earlier version of the graphic on this page said that there have been 50 million deaths from HIV/AIDS. The correct number is 35 million.

Michael S. Rosenwald

Michael Rosenwald is an enterprise reporter writing about history, the social sciences, and culture. He also hosts Retropod, a daily podcast. Before joining The Post in 2004, he was a reporter at The Boston Globe.

About this story

Sources: CDC, American Scientist, The Lancet, Social Science & Medicine, WHO, National Geographic, news and historical research.
Graphics reporting by Aaron Steckelberg. Photo editing by Nick Kirkpatrick, Haley Hamblin and Troy Witcher. Design and development by Brandon Ferrill.

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Originally published April 7, 2020.