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“Epidemiology is Born”: Cholera in Paris, 1832

By David Morens, MD

“The Central Health Commission convened yesterday in an extraordinary session at the police prefecture... The Conseil Supérieur of Health was convened today at the Ministry of Commerce for the same purpose... Forty-eight Bureaus of Health are going to be set up in the 48 quarters of Paris in order to render help to those attacked by cholera...”

So began Le Moniteur Universal in its introduction to the “First Health Bulletin of the City of Paris” on Friday, 30 March, 1832.  Judged by its far-reaching influence on popular imagination, art, and the birth of modern epidemiology, the Paris cholera epidemic is among the most significant events of human history. In a matter of months, 18,402 Parisians died, gripping the city in terror. The epidemic was capricious and mercurial, seeming to strike everywhere at random. Hearses, disguised as cabs, were stationed on street corners, but so many deaths occurred so quickly that soon desperate Parisians were looking out of shuttered windows at parades of carts and furniture vans, piled high with bodies, rolling through the streets. No one who remained in Paris ever forgot the summer of 1832.

In her 1907 memoirs the Comtesse de Boigne recalled Palm Sunday: “Mme. de Champlatreux... a girl of 20.. was taken ill on returning from a walk to the flower market and died in the night. We were speaking of this sad event when the Marquis de Castries entered and asked if we knew why Mme. de Montcalm was not receiving as usual... We went to her house to inquire; she was dead.... M. de Glandéves had been taken ill the night before, but not seriously. Someone assured us that he had seen him that morning quite well.  Nevertheless, we went to inquire again; he was dead. We had not recovered from the shock when M. de Pasquier was called away to see his niece, with whom he had dined, and whom he found at the last gasp...” (1). But this was the genteel description.

Châteaubriand, also of the nobility, wrote in his posthumous memoirs with eloquent horror: “Imagine a mortuary sheet flying as a flag from the heights of Notre Dame’s towers, solitary canon blasts thundering intermittently to drive away the imprudent traveler; a cordon of troops circling the city, permitting no one to enter or leave, churches filled with moaning crowds, priests chanting, day and night, prayers of perpetual agony, the last rites taken from house to house with religious candles and little bells, tolling funeral bells never silent, monks, with crucifixes in hand, calling out in the intersections for people to do penance, preaching the cholera and God’s judgement, shown by the cadavers already fed to the fires of hell.” (2)

Although most of the privileged fled Paris, the poet Heinrich Heine credited others with courage in trying to allay panic, including the king and especially the queen, who cut up and distributed bandages. The Prince d'Orléans, Casimir Périer, and the Archbishop of Paris visited the sick at the Hotel-Dieu and at other hospitals. Heine, who stayed in Paris throughout, even indirectly applauded himself as being among the few who could have fled but chose to stay, writing that “the Messieurs Rothschild, have... quietly remained in Paris, thereby manifesting that they are great-minded and brave.” (3) (For centuries, Jews had been accused of starting epidemics by poisoning wells, as Heine’s readers of the day knew well. Heine apparently could not resist a literary rebuttal to epidemiologic anti-Semitism.)

Heine’s defensiveness was not without reason. As the cause of cholera was then unknown, and as many deaths occurred so quickly after onset, and were associated with so few symptoms before terminal pallor and collapse, there soon arose a wild rumor of mass poisoning. Organized vigilante squads began to roam the streets and to congregate at key intersections, looking for poisoners, searching the persons and possessions of suspicious men. Heine saw the mob hang a supposed poisoner in the rue Saint-Denis. In the rue Vaugirard he described the deaths of two more “poisoners.” “I saw one of the wretches... still in his death-rattle... old women plucked the wooden shoes from their feet and beat him on the head until he was dead. He was naked and beaten and bruised so that his blood flowed; they tore from him not only his clothes, but also his hair, and cut off his lips and nose; and one blackguard... dragged [the corpse] through the streets, crying out ‘Voilá le choléra-morbus!’ A very beautiful woman, pale with rage, with barebreasts and bloody hands, was present, and as the corpse passed her she kicked it.  She laughed to me, and begged for a few Francs... to buy a mourning-dress, because her mother had died a few hours before of poison.” (3)

Heine, who wrote the most famous description of all, continued: “...It was a reign of terror far more dreadful than the first [during the revolution], because the executions took place so rapidly and mysteriously... there were ranged high piled [in an open public building], one on the other, many hundreds of white sacks containing every one a corpse... [and]... the watchers of the dead...  with a grim indifference counted out the sacks to the men who buried them... the latter, as they piled them on their cars, repeated the numbers in lower tones, or complained harshly that they had received one corpse too few, over which there often arose a strange dispute. And I remember how two small boys with sorrowful faces stood by, and that one asked me if I could tell him in which sack his father was.” (3)

In describing actually and metaphorically the onset of the epidemic, on the night of 29 March at the masked ball of the mi-carême (mid-Lent), Heine created a literary image that is still resonant and still widely read, and which has greatly influenced art, literature, movies, and popular conceptions of fatal epidemics. Heine’s description of the grim costume ball, in which death circulates undiscovered, apparently influenced Edgar Allen Poe’s “Masque of the Red Death,” and at least three other of Poe’s tales, while T. S. Eliot’s image of death as the “eternal footman” (in “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.” written more than 80 years later) also echoes a vivid image from Heine’s description.

The epidemic had an even greater effect on public health. Paris was quickly and exhaustively organized along both public health and clinical lines. The newspapers published mortality figures daily, and they were widely studied: for the first time in history, every literate person could become an armchair epidemiologist. So many books and broadsides on cholera were published that there was a veritable deluge of information on prevention. The city took action. Large assemblies were prohibited (in case cholera was transmitted by the airborne route, which few believed anyway), the sale and distribution of used clothing was prohibited (in case the disease was transmitted like smallpox occasionally was), markets were removed to the city’s outskirts (in case miasmas from rotting vegetation caused cholera), and health alert signs were posted on the dwellings of all cholera victims until eight days after their recovery or death. 

For the most part, the public was glad that its government was taking an active role beyond that of any other government up to that time. The city’s several thousand rag-pickers, however, were upset at the injunction that prevented them from picking through garbage, which deprived them of their livelihood. They organized themselves with huxter-wives and attempted a “counter-revolution,” the men barricading themselves at the Porte Saint-Denis and the women fighting on elsewhere with umbrellas. The insurrection was put down, but cholera continued.  

During the year of cholera, epidemiology was born. The French “hygienists” studied and wrote extensively about the epidemic, many of them using municipal vital statistics and constantly updated disease-specific mortality figures to plot epidemic spread, and to quantitatively characterize the epidemic in person, place and time. The great triumvirate of “proto-epidemiologists,” Benoiston de Châteauneuf, Parent-Duchâtelet, and Villermé co-wrote, with non-medical and non-hygienist colleagues, a classic epidemic report. (4)  Other medical luminaries weighed in with epidemiologic or public health studies of their own (e.g., Bouillaud, Caffe, Desgenettes, Moreau, and Velpeau). Prevost plotted what appears to be among the first examples of an epidemic curve, defending its simplicity with embarrassed defensiveness. The word “epidemiologie” appeared in France and Germany shortly after the epidemic, in the 1830s and 1840s, from which it was apparently exported into the English language in December, 1849, during planning for establishment of the London Epidemiological Society.

Published February 1998  v

References:

1.  Le Borgne CLEA.  Récits d'une Tante.  Mémoires de la Comtesse de Boigne, née d'Osmond, publiés d'aprés les manuscrits original par M.C. Nicoullaud. Paris, 1907.

2. Châteaubriand F-A-R.  Le cholera (XXVII).  Paris, rue d'Enfer, mai 1832. In: Châteaubriand F-A-R.  Mémoires d'outre-tombe. Paris, 1849.

3. Heine H. The cholera in Paris. In: Heine H [translated by Leland CG]. The Works of Heinrich Heine. French Affairs. I. Volume 14.  The Citizen Kingdom in 1832 (continued). VI. New York: Crosscup and Sterling, 1900:155-185.

4. Benoiston de Châteauneuf L-F, Chevallier, Devaux L, Millot L, Parent-Duchtelet A-J-B, Petit de Maurienne A, Pontonnier, Trébuchet, Villermé L-R, Villot.  Rapport sur la marche et les effets du choléra-morbus dans Paris et les communes rurales du département de la Seine, par la commission nommée par MM. les préfets de la Seine et de police. Année 1832. Paris: Imprimerie royale, 1832.

 

 
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