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Epilogue: A Hypothesis on the East Asian Beginnings of the Yersinia pestis Polytomy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2021

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Summary

FOR THE HISTORIAN of premodern Eurasia, the 2013 study of historical variations in Yersinia pestis mutation rates by Yujun Cui and others signals a new departure in the cumulative study of the genetics of the bacillus over the preceding fifteen years. Whereas previous studies had been moving to define Y. pestis's place of origin and dissemination only in a broad chronological framework of up to 20,000 years (Achtman et al. 2004; Morelli et al. 2010), Cui and colleagues’ work makes a histori-cal claim of much greater precision: that the evolution of Y. pestis since its divergence from its most recent common ancestor may have occurred within the past three to four thousand years, and more importantly that a polytomy (simultaneous or nearly simultaneous genetic divergence of multiple lineage branches) or “Big Bang” that yielded most of the current strains of Y. pestis, as well as the 1348 Black Death strain, took place between 1142 and 1339 (Cui et al. 2013: 580, table 1; their time interval has a confidence level of 95%). Their further finding, that the bacillus originated in or near the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, offers historians both a period and place to look for human events that could produce a punctuated genetic divergence. I will offer as a hypothesis that the “Big Bang” can be placed in space and time in historical sources, too: that the polytomy first manifests itself historically in the long destruction, by the Mongols under Cinggis-Qan (Genghis Khan), of the Xia state of the Mi or “Tangut” people in the early 1200s, and continues with the movement of the Mongols into north China, south China, and much of Eurasia. The new genetic evidence, I argue, merits revisiting the documentary evidence of epidemics in thirteenth-and fourteenth-century Central Asia and China, epidemics that earlier authors had proposed as possible Y. pestis outbreaks. No piece of evidence I offer argues unambiguously for plague: in particular, the Chinese sources have little to say about clinical symptoms and nothing to say about rodents. The case I propose rests rather on how bits of evidence fit together and, as a starting point, on their fit with the Cui team's findings on the Big Bang's timing and the region of plague's origin; and I point forward to the need for new research on China and Inner Asia.

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Pandemic Disease in the Medieval World
Rethinking the Black Death
, pp. 285 - 308
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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