It's amazing that even 234 years ago, back in 1787, Catherine the Great knew the importance of getting vaccinated against diseases. Today, in 2021, sadly 33% of U.S. residents are still not smart enough to understand that.
In 1768, Catherine became the first person in Russia to be vaccinated against smallpox, and she had her son vaccinated soon after. In 18th-century Europe, smallpox would sometimes kill off entire villages at once (infected people would die within 2 weeks). Smallpox was finally eradicated worldwide in 1980 because of vaccines. Now, Catherine The Great's letter urging vaccinations is up for Auction. Here's the story and the history:
Empress Catherine the Great's letter on smallpox vaccination to go up for auction
A letter written by Russian empress Catherine the Great on April 20, 1787, stressing the importance of the smallpox vaccine to the count of Malorossiya (modern-day Ukraine), will go up for auction on Dec. 1 at MacDougall's in London, according to news reports.
That letter, previously held in an anonymous private collection, was recently displayed for the first time in Moscow and will go up for auction at MacDougall's auction house in London On Dec. 1, according to the Moscow Times.(Image: -We have a lot of photographs in our collection, but this is perhaps the most iconic. Both boys were exposed to smallpox, but only the boy on the right had previously been vaccinated. The photograph, taken by a doctor working in Leicester, UK was first published in 1901. Credit: @DrJennersHouse)Catherine the Great, who ruled Russia from 1762 to 1796, was a major advocate for vaccination at a time when there was a lot of public resistance to the idea, according to MacDougall's. In 1768, she became the first person in Russia to be vaccinated against smallpox, and she had her son vaccinated soon after. The smallpox virus devastated the world for at least 3,000 years, before modern vaccination campaigns wiped it out in 1980, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In 18th-century Europe, smallpox would sometimes kill off entire villages at once, according to MacDougall's. The first successful smallpox vaccine wasn't available until 1796, when an English Doctor Edward Jenner realized that milkmaids who had caught cowpox did not catch smallpox, according to the WHO. Prior to that, during the time of Catherine the Great's reign, vaccination involved exposing people to the smallpox virus itself. Doctors would cut incisions in a healthy person's arm and insert threads of fabrics containing pus from a person infected with smallpox, according to MacDougall's. This primitive vaccination method made people sick for some time and had a 2% risk of death, or about 20 times lower than if a person was naturally infected with smallpox. "Among the other duties of the Welfare Boards in the Provinces entrusted to you, one of the most important should be the introduction of inoculation against smallpox, which, as we know, causes great harm, especially among the ordinary people," Catherine the Great wrote in Cyrllic, a Slavic alphabet, in the newly unveiled letter addressed to Count Piotr Aleksandrovich, the governor-general and vice-regent of Malorossiya. "Such inoculation should be common everywhere." In the letter, she wrote that the count should order each town to build temporary lodgings in abolished convents or small monasteries for people who couldn't be vaccinated at home. The letter is "unique, especially given this situation we are all in," Oleg Khromov, a historian, told reporters via video at a press conference on Thursday (Nov. 18), according to The Moscow Times.
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