Eyam: The Village That Chose to Stay
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概要
In 1665, the plague arrived in the Derbyshire village of Eyam inside a parcel of cloth from London. Faced with contagion, fear, and the risk of spreading disease across the region, the villagers made an extraordinary choice: they quarantined themselves for over a year, allowing the plague to burn through their own community rather than escape into the Peak District beyond.
In this episode, we follow Eyam through its darkest year — from the first deaths to the boundary stones, the outdoor sermons, the heavy losses, and the strange mix of faith and intuition that created one of the most remarkable public health decisions in British history.
*Hidden Derbyshire: Landscapes of Time*
A documentary storytelling podcast about the places where history, folklore, and landscape intersect.
**Primary Historical Sources**
* **Mompesson, William** — Surviving letters & parish documents
— Key firsthand clerical perspective on quarantine & losses.
* **London Bills of Mortality (1665–1666)**
— Context for plague spread, mortality scale, and chronology.
* **Parish Registers (Eyam)**
— Burial records, household groupings, mortality sequencing.
**Secondary Historical Works (Core Eyam Scholarship)**
* **Clifford, Tim** (1993). *Eyam: Plague Village*.
— Accessible narrative history; foundational for modern public memory.
* **Ranger, Terence** (1995). *Plague, Quarantine and Memory: Eyam Revisited*.
— Examines how the story has been interpreted over time.
* **Waddington, K.** (2014). *The Plague Revisited: Eyam and the Politics of Disease Memory*.
— Memory studies; Victorian romanticisation & epidemiological framing.
**Epidemiology & Disease Context**
* **Slack, Paul** (1985). *The Impact of Plague in Tudor and Stuart England*.
— Key epidemiological/social history resource.
* **Cohn, S.** (2003). *The Black Death Transformed*.
— Broader context for plague interpretation, contagion vs miasma theory.
* Public health analysis of Eyam used in:
— **Rosen, G.** (1958). *A History of Public Health*
— **Public Health Reports** (20th c. case studies; quarantine comparison)
**Theological & Social Context**
* Division & cooperation between:
✔ Rev. **William Mompesson** (Anglican)
✔ **Thomas Stanley** (Puritan, ejected minister)
* Useful analyses in:
— **Spufford, Margaret** (1984). *Small Books and Pleasant Histories* (religiosity & literacy)
— **Walsham, Alexandra** (2016). *The Reformation of the Landscape* (memory & sacred space)
**Demography & Mortality**
* Population estimates: **~750–800 residents** pre-plague
* Deaths: records vary, typically **~260+ deaths** (≈30–35% mortality)
* Unequal household distribution noted in parish registers.
**Consensus Statements**
Historians broadly agree:
✔ Quarantine was locally initiated & locally enforced
✔ Clerical partnership (Mompesson + Stanley) was crucial
✔ Boundary stones + vinegar coins + outdoor sermons documented
✔ Decision likely prevented wider regional spread
✔ Eyam’s story persists due to moral clarity + rarity of community quarantine
### **Interpretive Gaps**
Uncertainties remain:
• Exact role of fleas vs human-to-human pneumonic cases
• Degree of compliance vs coercion
• Motivation: faith vs duty vs fear vs practicality
• How many external lives were saved (absence of epidemic is data, not number)
**Memory & Tourism**
* Victorian reinterpretation transformed Eyam into exemplary moral narrative
* 20th c. = epidemiological case study
* 21st c. = heritage + tourism + pedagogy (museum, trail, plaques)
**Accessible Public Sources**
* Eyam Museum (interpretation, objects, chronology)
* Peak District NPA heritage notes
* Church of St Lawrence visitor panels
* Local walking trails & plague cottage signage
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