Mexico Cuba Dominican Republic Puerto Rico Panama Colombia Venezuela Ecuador Peru Bolivia Brazil Paraguay Uruguay Chile Argentina
🌎 NEW: Raíces, your Latin American bloodline, just €15 Pick your country and we model your DNA against its indigenous peoples plus every Old-World source of Latin history, on an interactive map.
Discover Raíces
United States Canada
🦅 NEW: El Gringo, your North American bloodline (USA & Canada), just €15 Your Native American, British, French, German, Scandinavian & African American roots, modelled on an interactive map.
Discover El Gringo
✡️
✡️ NEW: Am Yisrael, your Jewish Diaspora report, just €15 Ancient Israelite & Levantine core + your community's diaspora host admixture — Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Mizrahi & more, on a Jerusalem-centred map.
Discover Am Yisrael
🌍
🌍 NEW: Sankofa, your African Diaspora report, just €15 Regional West, Central & East African modelling plus your community's European and Amerindian layers, for African American, Afro-Caribbean, Afro-Brazilian, Afro-Latino and continental African roots.
Discover Sankofa

Study Information

2026
Greece

Abstract

The Plague of Athens represents one of the earliest and most detailed descriptions of a large-scale epidemic in recorded history. Emerging in 430 BC during the second year of the Peloponnesian War, it caused extensive mortality, including the death of Pericles, the leader of Athenian democracy at the time. Thucydides, the famous historian, provides an eyewitness account with a rich clinical narrative encompassing symptomatology, complications, mortality rates, epidemic dynamics, post-infection immunity, and animal involvement. In this narrative review, we integrate Thucydides’ account with modern clinical knowledge, archaeological evidence, and ancient DNA data to reassess the most plausible cause of the epidemic. DNA analysis from dental pulp of skeletons found in a mass burial of the Kerameikos cemetery demonstrated the DNA presence of Salmonella enterica among individuals who died during the outbreak. Human-restricted pathogens traditionally proposed as causes of the Plague of Athens fail to account for the zoonotic features emphasized in the historical record. By contrast, non-typhoidal Salmonellae enterica (NTS) are zoonotic and, under conditions of crowding, malnutrition, and sanitation breakdown, are capable of causing invasive, systemic disease with high mortality. We propose that the cause of the epidemic is most consistent with an unusually virulent, invasive strain of non-typhoidal Salmonella enterica. While precise serovar identification remains speculative, this interpretation provides the most coherent synthesis of the historical, clinical, archaeological, and molecular data currently available. A structured differential diagnosis against other zoonotic pathogens further supports this conclusion.

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing to visit this site you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more

🧭 Find your report