• PugJesus@lemmy.worldOPM
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    9 days ago

    Explanation: The European colonial empires of the 19th century often justified their behavior by pointing to the ‘uncivilized’ nature of the nations they butchered and conquered. However, Europe in the 19th century was… not exactly well-developed on the homefront. Sewage systems, in particular, were a ghastly-late introduction, even in the most advanced towns of Europe.

    Almost like the main advantage of European ‘civilization’ was the gun and the state’s ability to marshal the people who use it, not a higher standard of behavior or human development…

    • ValiantDust@feddit.org
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      9 days ago

      Haworth , the village the Brontës lived in, is another ghastly example. The conditions where so unsanitary that in 1850 the average life expectancy was 25.8 years and more than 40% died before the age of 6.

      Except for Charlotte Brontë who made it to 38, all the Brontë children died by 31. And they probably didn’t even drink the water contaminated by runoff from the graveyard, as they had their own water source.

      Another fun fact for the history nerds: B. Herschel Babbage, the guy who investigated the conditions on the invitation of the Brontë sisters’ father, was the son of mathematician Charles Babbage, the inventor of the Analytical Engine.

      • trollercoaster@sh.itjust.works
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        8 days ago

        Average life expectancy (as pretty much any average) is a very misleading measurement, though, because it is highly skewed towards the low end due to extremely high infant mortality.

      • banghida@lemm.ee
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        9 days ago

        No surprise, Atlantic Europe was a backwater until the discovery of the Americas.

    • Nougat@fedia.io
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      9 days ago

      True, but “tossing your excrement out the window” has always been a no-no.

      Solids go to the night-soil man for fertilizer. Liquids go in the barrel on the corner for tanning or laundry. There were some rudimentary sewer systems; they were just sorely underengineered.

      Another big dung-related problem that urban areas had was all the horse manure. The amount of horse manure that had to be collected and moved and sequestered every day was enormous, and the streets were muddy in no small part from urine.