Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The History of Tuberculosis from Earliest Times to the Development of Drugs

Roberts, C.A.; Buikstra, J.E.

Authors

J.E. Buikstra



Contributors

L.N. Friedman
Editor

M. Dedicoat
Editor

P.D.O. Davies
Editor

Abstract

This chapter considers the primary evidence for tuberculosis (TB) in the past-in the remains of people themselves-chart the distribution of the infection through time from a global perspective, and consider historical data for the presence of the disease in the distant past. It examines remarkable new developments from biomolecular analyses of the tubercle bacillus in human remains that are currently illuminating aspects of the history of TB. Tuberculosis is now a conquered disease in the British Isles and the rest of the industrialised world. When historical data are available, they can potentially provide a window on frequency rates of TB, but the numbers of those actually dying from TB may be inaccurate. Scholars studying TB in our ancestors draw on a number of sources. The primary evidence derives from people themselves who were buried in cemeteries throughout the world that have been excavated over the years and that contribute to the understanding of humankind's long history.

Citation

Roberts, C., & Buikstra, J. (2020). The History of Tuberculosis from Earliest Times to the Development of Drugs. In L. Friedman, M. Dedicoat, & P. Davies (Eds.), Clinical Tuberculosis. (6th). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1201/9781351249980-1

Online Publication Date Aug 27, 2020
Publication Date 2020
Deposit Date Jul 24, 2019
Edition 6th
Book Title Clinical Tuberculosis
Chapter Number 1
DOI https://doi.org/10.1201/9781351249980-1