The sheer contagiousness of the illness is…
429 BCE to 418 BCE
Those who tend to the ill are most vulnerable to catching the disease.
This means that many people die alone because no one is willing to risk caring for them.
The dead are heaped on top of each other, left to rot, or shoved into mass graves.
Sometimes those carrying the dead come across an already burning funeral pyre, dump a new body on it, and walk away.
Others appropriate prepared pyres so as to have enough fuel to cremate their own dead.
Those lucky enough to survive the plague develop an immunity and so become the main caretakers of those who later fall ill.
A mass grave and nearly on thousand tombs, dated between 430 and 426 BCE, will be found just outside Athens' ancient Kerameikos cemetery.
The mass grave was bordered by a low wall that seems to have protected the cemetery from a wetland.
Excavated during 1994–95, the shaft-shaped grave may have contained a total of two hundred and forty individuals, at least ten of them children.
Skeletons in the graves had been randomly placed with no layers of soil between them.