Cholera, originally endemic to the Indian subcontinent,…
November 1830 CE
Cholera, originally endemic to the Indian subcontinent, with the Ganges River likely serving as a contamination reservoir, had been largely restricted to Bengal, where a pandemic had begun in the hinterland of Calcutta 1817.
By 1820, the cholera pandemic had spread across India.
Continuing to spread by trade routes (land and sea), the outbreak had extended as far as China and the Caspian Sea before receding.
A second pandemic had begun in 1829, Russia’s tsarist government undertakes such anti-cholera measures as quarantine, armed cordons and migratory restrictions.
Influenced by rumors of deliberate contamination of ordinary people by government officials and doctors, agitated mobs start raiding police departments and state hospitals, killing hated functionaries, officers, landowners and gentry.
In November 1830, the citizens of Tambov attack their governor, but they are soon suppressed by the regular army.