When did malaria start?

QUESTION

What year did malaria start?

ANSWER

Malaria first emerged as an infection of humans tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of years ago. The species of malaria that infect humans probably evolved from closely related malaria species that infect macaques (in the case of Plasmodium vivax) and gorillas (in the case of P. falciparum).

The earliest records from human history of malaria come from a Chinese medical parchment almost 5000 years ago, and it is believed the ancient Egyptians also recognised the symptoms of the disease. Written accounts of malaria also occur in ancient Roman and Greek texts, though the true causes of malaria were not discovered until the 19th century.

Who discovered the disease malaria?

QUESTION:

Who discovered the malaria disease and when?

ANSWER:

Malaria has been known for thousands of years; there are written accounts of the disease, including a description of its symptoms, in ancient Chinese medical texts from 2700 BCE. The ancient Romans and Greeks also knew about malaria.

However, the causes of the disease were only discovered in the 19th century. In 1880, a French surgeon called CharlesĀ Louis Alphonse Laveran stationed in Algeria was the first person to see the parasites that cause malaria in the blood of an infected person. Then, a few years later, in 1897/1898, a British army doctor called Ronald Ross discovered that mosquitoes transmitted the parasites between patients. This allowed for further clarification of the life cycle of malaria, and thus opened up the path for modern malaria research and control.