Ep. 33 The Sweating Sickness: England’s Deadliest Mystery
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What if England’s most terrifying plague was never really a disease at all?
Between 1485 and 1551, something stalked through Tudor England that made the Black Death look like child’s play. The Sweating Sickness could kill you in two hours flat – and you’d be conscious for every agonizing minute of it. It didn’t care if you were rich or poor, young or old. But here’s the fucked up part: it seemed to *choose* its victims.
This wasn’t your typical medieval plague. It targeted intellectuals and nobles while sparing peasants. It appeared out of nowhere, terrorized the kingdom, then vanished completely – only to return decades later like some kind of supernatural boomerang from hell. And when it finally disappeared for good? It left behind a trail of paranormal activity that still haunts England today.
From the black hounds with glowing red eyes that prowled London’s streets during outbreaks, to the fever ghosts still seen wandering Greenwich Palace, to the cursed manuscript that killed every scholar who tried to read it – this is a medical mystery that defies every rule of science and ventures deep into occult territory.
Was the Sweating Sickness a natural disease that science still can’t explain? Or was it something far more sinister – a supernatural weapon wielded by the Tudor dynasty to eliminate their enemies? And if the legends are true, the knowledge of how to summon it might still exist today, hidden away and waiting for the right moment to unleash hell once again.
Join us as we dive into one of history’s most disturbing unsolved mysteries, where medicine meets the paranormal and the line between disease and curse becomes terrifyingly blurred.
**Warning: This episode contains discussions of death, disease, and potentially disturbing paranormal content. Listener discretion advised.**
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REFERENCES AND RESOURCES:
Primary Historical Sources
- John Caius - *A Boke or Counseill Against the Disease Commonly Called the Sweate* (1552) - The definitive contemporary medical account
- Raphael Holinshed - *Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland* (1577) - Contains outbreak records and eyewitness accounts
- Tudor State Papers- Official government records of outbreak responses and death tolls
Academic Sources
- Bridson, E. - “The English ‘Sweate’ (Sudor Anglicus) and Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome” - *Journal of the History of Medicine* (2001)
- Taviner, Mark - “The Sweating Sickness and John Caius” - *Medical History* (1997)
- Dyer, Alan - “The English Sweating Sickness of 1551: An Epidemic Anatomized” - *Medical History* (1997)
Paranormal & Folklore Sources
- Westwood, Jennifer & Simpson, Jacqueline - The Lore of the Land: A Guide to England’s Legends (2005)
- Underwood, Peter - Ghosts of Greenwich (1973) - Documents supernatural activity at Greenwich Palace
- Clarke, David - Supernatural England (2018) - Includes accounts of plague-related hauntings
Modern Investigations
- British Museum Archives - Restricted Tudor occult documents collection (Access by appointment only)
- Cambridge University Archives - Medieval manuscript collections and student records
- National Archives (Kew) - Tudor court records and physician correspondence
Online Resources
- The Sweating Sickness Research Project - sweatingsickness.org (Academic database of outbreak records)
- English Heritage - Greenwich Palace historical records and paranormal reports
- British Library Medieval Manuscripts - Digitized plague treatises and medical texts
*Note: Some resources mentioned in the episode (particularly modern paranormal investigations) are based on reported incidents rather than publicly verified academic sources. Always approach paranormal claims with healthy skepticism while appreciating their cultural and historical significance.
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