Wednesday, 5 December 2007

BBC Countryfile in the Fens

The BBC Countryfile team were filming in the Fens this week (4th 5th December)
I spent the morning with them in the company of Ben Fogle at Ely. My involvement came about because of my latest book “ Fenland Families” which is about Fenland Families who have been in business/trade or profession for three generations or more. Three families in the book were at Ely, Burrows, newsagents, Gibbs shoe shop and Bonnetts the bakers. The film crew then went on to Elgoods Brewers of Wisbech where they filmed the brewery along with the Elgood family. Elgoods together with Batemans of Wainfleet are two of the few family owned traditional breweries left in the UK. The programme highlights an area of the UK which has by its very nature retained strong links between traditional family concerns and the people who live there. Against all odds these families have survived to retain a unique part of our fenland society. It gave me great pleasure to record them in my book.
The programme will be on BBC TV at 11am Sunday 9th December.
Rex Sly

Monday, 22 October 2007

Malaria in the Fens

Fen Ague or Marsh fever, was an endemic disease once common in the East Anglican Fens. The English word Ague derives from Old French “ague” meaning “sever fever”.

The word was used in Geoffry Chaucer’s “Nun’s priest tales” in the 14th c and William Shakespeare refers to it in many of his plays.

Samuel Pepys, the diarist, suffered from Ague and Oliver Cromwell died of tertian ague in 1658.
It was thought the fever came from inhaling miasma given off during warm, hot weather.
Bargemen were susceptible to this disease as were those who lived and worked near the fen watercourses.

Major drainage of the Fens during the 17th c coupled with better personal hygiene alongside Britain entering a cooler period “the mini ice age” led to the decreased in Fen Ague. The disease was not unique to the Fens many marshlands in England also were know for this fever especially in Essex and along the Thames valley.

It was not until the 19th c that the word malaria (malus aria, Latin for bad air) began to replaced the word Ague and the disease died out.

It was, at this time realised that malaria was due to a protozoan parasite transmitted by the mosquito and not miasma.

The fen people had no cure for this disease, only sedatives such as opium and various potions made for indigenous plants, herbs and bark from ash trees to relieve the fever. Alcohol and Opium were commonly used to suppress the rigors of the first stages of ague.

The fens became notorious for “ Opium eaters” and laudanum given to children during teething which may have initiated this habit in their later lives. One Fenland physician wrote that “ a patch of white poppies was usually found in most Fen gardens”.

In the 17th c Robert Brady used cinchona powder, whose principle ingredient was quinine to treat Ague, which still used today. This was made from the bark of a several trees growing in Peru and Bolivia both Catholic countries. In Great Britain it became known as “Jesuit’s Powder” and some physicians of the Protestant orthodox religion were prejudice to it’s use in treating Ague.

By the mid 20th c the disease was found to be transmitted by the mosquito.

The strains of mosquitoes in the Fens at that time have become extinct. If malaria carrying mosquitoes did enter the Fens (which is unlikely) the disease could only be passed to humans from the insects carrying infect blood from other humans with the disease. There would have to be many humans infected for this to happen. There are more than 30 species of mosquitoes in Britain at this time and the vast majority do not bite humans.