A “Useless Marsh … Breeding Fever And Insect Pests”: Assessing Malaria Risk On Roads Through Cilicia Pedias (Modern Türkiye) And Its Historical Impact In Antiquity And The Middle Ages
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2026
School
Humanities
Abstract
Historical accounts suggest that malaria was endemic in ancient southern Anatolia, possibly as early as 800 BCE, but overwhelmingly from classical antiquity onwards. However, measuring the level and extent of malaria risk for pre-modern periods remains difficult, given the lack of quantifiable data. Surviving records indicate a particularly high prevalence of malaria-like symptoms in lowlands of Cilicia Pedias (southeastern Anatolia, modern Türkiye), especially with travellers for whom the region was a vital transit zone between Anatolia and Mesopotamia or the Levant. A GIS-based multi-layer malaria risk model developed for application to antiquity highlights the insalubrious nature of the region. For references to apparent malarial infection with spatial specificity, it provides quantified confirmation of malaria risk in the indicatedlocations. Combined with a new method for mapping ancient road paths, the model assigns risk igures to travel along those routes by merchants, pilgrims, and armies throughout antiquity. Model-produced maps depict risk for Cilicia Pedias and its major roads. Modelled risk data correlates extremely well with historical accounts of malaria-like illness related to victims’ known itineraries from the fourth century BCE through the twelfth century CE. These results support interpretation of reported sicknesses as malarial infection, and highlight the peril of the disease for immune-naïve travellers through the region; and, indeed, the impact of Plasmodium parasites on outcomes of certain historical events. This replicable model provides a case-study for combining GIS and text-based methodologies in evaluating malaria’s impact in the pre-modern Mediterranean, and application of similar techniques in other regions.
Publication Title
Parasitology
Recommended Citation
Browning, D.,
Nicovich, J.
(2026). A “Useless Marsh … Breeding Fever And Insect Pests”: Assessing Malaria Risk On Roads Through Cilicia Pedias (Modern Türkiye) And Its Historical Impact In Antiquity And The Middle Ages. Parasitology.
Available at: https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/22009
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