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Buboes in Thucydides?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Edna M. Hooker
Affiliation:
The University, Birmingham

Extract

In his article on The Sickness at Athens Mr. Watson Williams gives strong reasons for identifying the sickness with bubonic plague, and then goes on to say regretfully, ‘Thucydides, it is true, does not mention buboes’. But are we so sure that he does not? What are the ἕλκη which he mentions along with φλύκταιναι (ii. 49.5) as the outward manifestations of the disease? We have had no adequate explanation of these. Liddell and Scott render them as ‘plague-ulcers’, but this is obviously a conventional translation not based on any serious study of the symptoms of the sickness. Professor Page has given us a detailed discussion of Thucydides' medical vocabulary, but has shed no light on the word ἕλκος. He begins by telling us that ‘ἕλκος is a term of general reference, most commonly signifying a lesion of the soft parts of the body (the context must decide whether “sore”, “ulcer”, “wound”, or what else is intended)’; then, without any discussion of its context, we find him translating the word as ‘sores’ and finally he seeks to persuade us that the phrase ϕλυκταίναις μικραῖς καὶ ἕλκεσιν ἐξηνθηκός is equivalent to ‘crimson or dusky red spots covering the greater part of the body’. Sir William MacArthur, arguing persuasively for typhus, and Professor Shrewsbury, pressing the claims of measles, approach the problems from the medical standpoint, without any serious discussion of vocabulary, and neither offers any comment on the meaning of ‘ἕλκος. Other theorists appear to ignore it completely and concentrate on those symptoms which may be made to fit any infectious fever and particularly on those which are sufficiently vaguely described to allow of a little discreet distortion of the evidence. But surely we cannot hope to identify the sickness until we have decided what the ‘ἕλκος are, for, in the absence of laboratory tests, it is after all mainly by the skin eruptions and other external manifestations that we distinguish one infectious fever from another.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1958

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References

1 Greece and Rome iv (1957), 98–103.

2 GQ iii (1953), 97–119, esp. 101, 110, 112, 116.

3 CQ iv (1954), 171–4; and ap. Gomme, A Historical Commentary on Thucydides, ii. 153.

4 Bull. Hist. Med. xxiv (1950), 1–25.

5 Hp. Epid. iii, κατάστασις 2–15.

6 The phrase seems a little awkward: perhaps we should read

7 It is impossible to be certain whether mice or rats are intended, since the ancients did not distinguish between them.

8 Frazer, (Golden Bough, viii. 283)Google Scholar compares these images of mice with the image of a mouse which is said to have stood beside Apollo's tripod in the god's temple in the Troad, and suggests that the worship of Mouse (Smintheus) Apollo was instituted to avert plagues of mice. It is interesting to recall that it was to Apollo Smintheus that Chryses prayed in the Iliad (i. 29) to punish the Achaeans for their impiety and that the god responded by spreading a deadly pestilence among mules, dogs, and men.

9 Hdt. ii. 141.5.

10 LXX. 4 Ki. xix. 35–6. Cf. Is. xxxvii. 36–7.

11 Ruf. ap. Orib. xliv. 14.

12 Hp. Epid. ii. 3.5, iv. 42, v. 59, vi. 2.2, vii. 81.

13 It is surprising to find πυρετός used apparently of a local symptom. Possibly it may refer to a sensation of heat.

14 Ruf. ap. Orib. xliv. 18.

15 Gal. v. 12 (Kühn, vol. x, p. 361).

16 Ibid. (Kühn, vol. x, p. 367).

17 Procop. Pers. ii. 22.30.

18 Procop. Pers. ii. 22.17.

19 ibid., ii. 22.6.

20 Ruf. ap. Orib. xliv. 14.1.

21 Ebers, G., Papyros Ebers (Leipzig, 1875).Google Scholar

22 Lucr. vi. 1166–7.

23 The more important theories of Lucretius's sources are summarised in Bailey's edition of Lucretius (vol. iii, p. 1723).