Episode notes
At the height of the Pax Romana, the Roman Empire of 75 million people seemed invincible, with gleaming cities, aqueducts, and an unmatched military. Yet beneath that infrastructure lay a biologically stressed, densely packed population living in cities that acted as demographic sinks. When victorious legions returned from the East between 165 and 180 CE, they carried an invisible pathogen that would kill up to 2,000 people a day in Rome and an estimated 5 to 10 million across the empire.
This episode unpacks the Antonine Plague as a 2,000-year-old medical cold case, drawing on the eyewitness accounts of the physician Galen, the debate over whether the culprit was smallpox or measles, and the catastrophic ripple effects on the military, economy, and trade. We also explore groundbreaking 2024 research linking the crisis to a colossal volcani ...Â