Accounts of the Athenian plague graphically describe…
429 BCE to 418 BCE
Thucydides' account clearly details the complete disappearance of social morals during the time of the plague.
This perceived impact of the Athenian plague on collective social and religious behavior foreshadows accounts of the medieval pandemic best known as the Black Death, although scholars have disputed its objective veracity in both instances, citing a historical link between epidemic disease and unsubstantiated moral panic.
Thucydides states that people ceased fearing the law since they felt they were already living under a death sentence.
Likewise, people started spending money indiscriminately.
Many felt they would not live long enough to enjoy the fruits of wise investment, while some of the poor unexpectedly became wealthy by inheriting the property of their relatives.
It is also recorded that people refused to behave honorably because most did not expect to live long enough to enjoy a good reputation for it.