History Of Biowarfare

  • Aug 4, 1340

    Medieval Siege, Case 1

    Medieval Siege, Case 1
    Attackers hurled dead animals by catapult over castle walls into what is now Northern France. Northern France then complained the smell was so unbearable that they gave in and decided to negociate a truce.
  • Apr 5, 1346

    Medieval Siege, Case 2

    Tartars launched a a attaning the attack the on Caffa the before abandoning the attack they flew dead bodies infected with the plague the infect the defenders
  • Jul 23, 1422

    Medieval Siege, Case 3

    At Karlstien in Bohemia, the attacking forces launched rotten bodies of men that passed in battle. As a tactic, they used stockpiled animal manure hoping to spread illness.
  • American Revolution

    American Revolution
    First real smallpox vaccine was invented.Before that, it was suspected that the British military was responsible for spreading the small pox disease among civilians in Boston and perhaps in Quebec as well so make away with the continental army.
  • World War 1

    By the tme of the Great War, germs were taken under control by the scientists. They had discovered how microbes transmitted illness. The Germans took advantage of the discovery and infected animals hoping for it to spread causing devastating epidemics. Later, in 1925 the Genova Protocol came to place prohibiting the use of chemical and biological agents.
  • World war II

    Japanese scientists used scores of human subjects lethality of various disesase agents. including anthrax, cholera, typhoid and plegue as many as 10,000 people died