The town of Elbing (Elblag), located between…
1709 CE
The Elbing plague, unusual compared to the plague in other places, peaks in October 1709, fades out in the winter, will peak again in spring 1710, fade in the summer, and peak for a last time in the fall before vanishing in the winter, having killed about twelve hundred people or fifteen percent of the population each year.
This will lead Frandsen (2009) to speculate whether it was indeed the plague that raged in Elbing, a thorough analysis is however difficult due to the loss of the town's plague records in the Second World War.
On the other hand, some Elbing burghers profit from the plague in the neighboring cities, insofar as its skippers are allowed to enter non-infected houses in Königsberg and, according to Frandsen (2009), "carried out an illegal, but probably very useful and lucrative trade between Königsberg and Danzig."
Elbing has protected its population by guarding its walls and enforcing a forty-day quarantine on incoming persons.