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Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Vol. 12 (Classic Reprint)




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Hersteller:Forgotten Books (Hygiene, Royal Society of Tropical Medic)
Stand:2015-08-04 03:50:33

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Excerpt from Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Vol. 12 The campaign, however, is conducted in areas subject to great ranges of temperature between summer and winter, and where, owing to the domination of the Turk for over 500 years, the inhabitants live under more or less primitive conditions, without any special organisation for or attention to the preservation of health. Wars in this region have always been distinguished for much sickness and mortality, and it is because I think that information gathered from what has already happened may be useful in securing the adoption of more effective measures in these and in tropical countries, where the sanitary problems are much more complex than in France, that I am reading this paper. South-Eastern Europe the Gateway of the East and West. The South-Eastern corner of Europe has always been a great fighting arena. It is the gateway on land to the East and for the West, and as such its possession has been coveted in turn, and fought for by the rulers of expanding empires on either side of it from the earliest times. I he last of the great Powers in possession is the Turk. For the past 200 years Austria or Russia, alone or together, have attacked Turkey with the object of taking her place, and they have considerably reduced her hold. Now it is the ambition of Germany, in alliance with Austria, to become heir to the Turk. Germany remembers that Alexander the Great with a well-trained army, and without railways or other modern means of transport, started from the Vardar Valley, defeated the Persians - the most powerful nation of that time - conquered Palestine and Egypt, destroyed the Persian imperial power at Arbela, and extended his conquests to Afghanistan and India. It was only war-weariness of the soldiers, after nine years of incessant warfare, that prevented him from adding India to the Macedonian empire. Germany hopes, and I do not for a moment believe she will discard that hope, whether as an empire or a republic, that she will one day be in possession of the gateway, or so control it that she will be able with her Allies to attack the British Empire at a vulnerable spot and threaten our possessions in Africa and Asia. If she cannot retain the gateway in this present war by force, nor by diplomacy cheat the Allies, she will, I think, unless great foresight be shewn, endeavour to do it in times of peace by colonisation and bide her time. It is not without purpose that the Serbian population has been largely exterminated and scattered. It makes it easier to colonise and to occupy by peaceful penetration. Sickness and Mortality in the Early Wars. Although the chief interest necessarily centres in the sickness and mortality that have occurred in the war of to-day, yet some of the events in the more remote times are not without their lesson. For instance, it is germane to the subject to recall the fact that the immense army of Xerxes on its retreat through Thessaly and across the Vardar Plain, and that portion of the country now occupied by the British troops in the Struma Valley, suffered from hunger, dysentery and pestilence to such an extent that the greater part of it perished, and when the remnant reached Abydos the major portion died, though food and water were plentiful. In the accounts of the wars between Austria and Turkey and between Russia and Turkey in the eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth century, the invariable story is one of much sickness and mortality from intermittent fevers, dysentery, typhus fever and plague, and from tile effects of a bad commissariat. I he infection Of typhus and plague were not confined to the armies, but spread to the civil population, who, in their turn, infected the soldiers billeted in the villages and towns. It was largely owing to these frequent


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