Late Middle Ages · Middle East · Disaster
1348
Plague reaches Mecca and the hajj caravans
1348
Ibn Battuta, back in Damascus and observing the pestilence, reported that two thousand people a day were dying in the city. The plague then followed pilgrim routes into the Hijaz, where it struck Mecca and Medina with devastating force. The Islamic world suffered as much as Christendom, perhaps more than Chinese contemporaries who had encountered the disease earlier.
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