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In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indies, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'', an expedition that would kickstart the spread of the vaccine over there, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 eight-year-old orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat UsefulNotes/SirFrancisDrake and his obscure [[UsefulNotes/AngloSpanishWar15851604 1589 English Armada]], the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never torment again the subjects of the Hispanic Monarchy.

to:

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indies, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'', an expedition that would kickstart the spread of the vaccine over there, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 eight-year-old orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat UsefulNotes/SirFrancisDrake and his obscure [[UsefulNotes/AngloSpanishWar15851604 [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOfTheSpanishArmada 1589 English Armada]], the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never torment again the subjects of the Hispanic Monarchy.
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The Balmis Expedition, technically known as the ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'' ("Royal Philantropic Expedition of the Vaccine"), could be accurately described as the first medical campaign in history, undergone by the Spanish Empire in 1803, and literally PoweredByAForsakenChild.

to:

The Balmis Expedition, technically known as the ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'' ("Royal Philantropic Expedition of the Vaccine"), could be accurately described as the first mass medical campaign in history, undergone by the Spanish Empire in 1803, and literally PoweredByAForsakenChild.



In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indies, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'', an expedition that would kickstart the spread of the vaccine over there, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat UsefulNotes/SirFrancisDrake and his obscure [[UsefulNotes/AngloSpanishWar15851604 1589 English Armada]], the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never torment again the subjects of the Hispanic Monarchy.

to:

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indies, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'', an expedition that would kickstart the spread of the vaccine over there, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 eight-year-old orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat UsefulNotes/SirFrancisDrake and his obscure [[UsefulNotes/AngloSpanishWar15851604 1589 English Armada]], the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never torment again the subjects of the Hispanic Monarchy.



The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of their nearby British colonialists (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Macau from the Philippines, shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, doing the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children, their mission finished, settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he returned to Europe by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he stated, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." The event also served to give Jenner himself a boost of attention, and also gave UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte the idea to vaccinate his own troops in 1805, after which he awarded a medal to Jenner despite being at war with Britain at the time (he ignored Balmis, although that's hardly new for a Spaniard). In 1810, even with Napoleon having invaded Spain, Balmis would undertake a new expedition to the Indias to check up the effects of his previous venture, and organized it so the vaccine would continue reaching the corners of the empire. He would die nine years later.

to:

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of their nearby British colonialists (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before the forces under Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Macau from the Philippines, shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, doing the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children, their mission finished, settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he returned to Europe by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he stated, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." The event also served to give Jenner himself a boost of attention, and also gave UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte the idea to vaccinate his own troops in 1805, after which he awarded a medal to Jenner despite being at war with Britain at the time (he ignored Balmis, although that's hardly new for a Spaniard). In 1810, even with Napoleon having invaded Spain, Balmis would undertake a new expedition to the Indias Indies to check up the effects of his previous venture, and organized it so the vaccine would continue reaching the corners of the empire. He would die nine years later.



* Julia Álvarez's 2006 short story ''Saving the World'' takes the point of view of the orphanage's chairwoman Isabel Zendal Gómez,.

to:

* Julia Álvarez's 2006 short story ''Saving the World'' takes again the point of view of the orphanage's chairwoman Isabel Zendal Gómez,.Zendal.



* ''A flor de piel'', by Javier Moro, also stars Zendal.

to:

* ''A flor de piel'', by Javier Moro, also stars Zendal.Zendal during the expedition.
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[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fjbalmis.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:Francisco Javier de Balmis.]]

to:

[[quoteright:300:https://static.[[quoteright:270:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fjbalmis.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:Francisco [[caption-width-right:270:Francisco Javier de Balmis.]]



In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives more intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous themselves, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives who allied with the Spaniards, but few modern people care about those anyway) during the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest of the Mexica Empire]]. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly huge number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in [[BiologicalWeaponsSolveEverything biological warfare to depopulate their new lands]], even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, however, could not be any more different.

to:

In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives more intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous themselves, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives who allied with the Spaniards, but few modern people care about those anyway) during the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest of the Mexica Empire]]. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly huge number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in [[BiologicalWeaponsSolveEverything biological warfare to depopulate their new lands]], even although this [[MeaninglessVillainVictory would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place place]] by depriving them of subjects. The reality, however, could not be any more different.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives more intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous themselves, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives who allied with the Spaniards, but few modern people care about those anyway) during the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest of México]]. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly huge number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in [[BiologicalWeaponsSolveEverything biological warfare to depopulate their new lands]], even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, however, could not be different.

Regardless of its devastation abroad, smallpox was still lethal in Europe up to the 18th century. Back then, the known way to immunize people against the disease was variolation, a primitive and rather squicky procedure that involved extracting pus from infected pustules and injecting it into the subject, intending to inoculating him with an underfed form of the virus that would be more manageable to build immunity, but this procedure was dangerous and often risked spreading the disease itself. Fortunately, an English doctor by the name of Edward Jenner made a great discovery in 1796: variolation worked much better when inoculating cowpox, a process we now call vaccination (from ''vaccina'', Latin for something related to cows). However, this method still had a big problem, namely that the extracted fluid could not be kept fresh for more than ten days, and given that there was no cowpox in America, transporting there the demanded cure for smallpox proved quite a challenge. When continental Spain managed to get the vaccine in 1800, King Charles IV, who had lost his little daughter María Teresa to this disease six years before, decided they had to find a way to banish smallpox for good from the rest of his empire. The royal doctor who had translated the first vaccination instructional from French to Spanish, Dr. Francisco Javier de Balmis y Berenguer, was the man Charles IV had been waiting for.

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indias, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'', an expedition that would kickstart the spread of the vaccine, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Hispanic Monarchy.

The Balmis Expedition, as it was more popularly called, carried first the cure to the Canarian Islands, and from there traveled to America. Upon arriving to the Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and other countries), the expedition divided into two, with Balmis marching north towards New Spain (México) and Cuba while his second-in-command José Salvany y Lleopart went south to the Viceroyalty of Peru, and Balmis later traveled to Philippines. The expedition found many difficulties through the road, as Balmis was denied more orphan children to continue the human chain in México and had to use black slaves, while Salvany fell ill of up to ''three'' other diseases and would die not much after, not to count superstitious indigenous that were wary of the whole thing, but the expedition endured all of this and kept on. Added to the efforts to Dr. Francisco Oller, Dr. Tomás Romay and Dr. Alejandro García de Arboleya, who had already introduced the vaccine in several points of the empire, and Dr. Santiago Granado y Navarro Calderón, who replaced Salvany in the expedition, they managed to immunize hundreds of thousands of people.

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of their nearby British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Macau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, doing the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children, their mission finished, settled down in various places of the empire.

to:

In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives more intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous themselves, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives who allied with the Spaniards, but few modern people care about those anyway) during the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest of México]].the Mexica Empire]]. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly huge number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in [[BiologicalWeaponsSolveEverything biological warfare to depopulate their new lands]], even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, however, could not be any more different.

Regardless of its devastation abroad, smallpox was still lethal in Europe up to the 18th century. Back then, At the time, the only known way to immunize people against the disease was variolation, a primitive and rather squicky procedure that involved extracting pus from infected pustules and injecting it into the subject, intending to inoculating him with an underfed form of the virus that would be more manageable to build immunity, but this procedure was dangerous and often risked spreading the disease itself. Fortunately, an English doctor by the name of Edward Jenner made a great discovery in 1796: variolation worked much better when inoculating cowpox, a process we now call vaccination (from ''vaccina'', Latin for something related to cows). However, this method still had a big problem, namely that the extracted fluid could not be kept fresh for more than ten days, and given that there was no cowpox in America, transporting there the demanded cure for smallpox proved quite a challenge. When continental Spain managed to get the vaccine in 1800, King Charles IV, who had lost his little daughter María Teresa to this disease six years before, decided they had to find a way to banish smallpox for good from the rest of his empire. The royal doctor who had translated the first vaccination instructional from French to Spanish, Dr. Francisco Javier de Balmis y Berenguer, was the man Charles IV had been waiting for.

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indias, Indies, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'', an expedition that would kickstart the spread of the vaccine, vaccine over there, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat Sir Francis Drake UsefulNotes/SirFrancisDrake and his obscure [[UsefulNotes/AngloSpanishWar15851604 1589 English Armada in 1589, Armada]], the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage torment again the subjects of the Hispanic Monarchy.

The Balmis Expedition, as it was more popularly called, carried first the cure to the Canarian Islands, and from there traveled to America. Upon arriving to the Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and other countries), the expedition divided into two, with Balmis marching north towards New Spain (México) and Cuba while his second-in-command José Salvany y Lleopart went south to the Viceroyalty of Peru, and Perú; Balmis would later traveled travel to Philippines. The expedition found many difficulties through the road, as Balmis was denied more orphan children to continue the human chain in México and had to use black slaves, while Salvany fell ill of up to ''three'' other diseases and would die not much after, not to count superstitious indigenous that were wary of the whole thing, but the expedition endured all of this and kept on. Added to the efforts to Dr. Francisco Oller, Dr. Tomás Romay and Dr. Alejandro García de Arboleya, who had already introduced the vaccine in several points of the empire, and Dr. Santiago Granado y Navarro Calderón, who replaced Salvany in the expedition, they managed to immunize hundreds of thousands of people.

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of their nearby British colonizers colonialists (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Macau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, doing the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children, their mission finished, settled down in various places of the empire.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives more intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous themselves, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives who allied with the Spaniards, but few modern people care about those anyway) during the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly huge number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in [[BiologicalWeaponsSolveEverything biological warfare to depopulate their new lands]], even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, however, could not be different.

to:

In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives more intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous themselves, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives who allied with the Spaniards, but few modern people care about those anyway) during the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico.[[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest of México]]. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly huge number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in [[BiologicalWeaponsSolveEverything biological warfare to depopulate their new lands]], even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, however, could not be different.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Balmis Expedition, technically known as the ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'' ("Royal Philantropic Expedition of the Vaccine"), could be accurately described as the first medical campaign in history, underwent by the Spanish Empire in 1803, and literally PoweredByAForsakenChild.

to:

The Balmis Expedition, technically known as the ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'' ("Royal Philantropic Expedition of the Vaccine"), could be accurately described as the first medical campaign in history, underwent undergone by the Spanish Empire in 1803, and literally PoweredByAForsakenChild.



!!In fiction:

to:

!!In fiction:media:

Added: 1166

Changed: 11244

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives allied to the Spaniards, but few people care about those anyway) during the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly massive number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in biological warfare to depopulate their new lands, even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, as they used to say in Extremadura, homeland to many conquistadores, is very different.

Regardless of its devastation abroad, smallpox was still lethal in Europe up to the 18th century. Back then, the known way to immunize people against the disease was variolation, a primitive and rather squicky procedure that involved extracting pus from infected pustules and injecting it into the subject, intending to inoculating him with an underfed form of the virus that would be more manageable, but this procedure was dangerous and often risked spreading the disease itself. Fortunately, an English doctor by the name of Edward Jenner made a great discovery in 1796: variolation worked much better when inoculating cowpox, a process we now call vaccination (from ''vaca''). However, this method still had a big problem, namely that the extracted fluid could not be kept fresh for more than ten days, and given that there was no cowpox in America, transporting there the demanded cure for smallpox proved quite a challenge. When continental Spain managed to get the vaccine in 1800, King Charles IV, who had lost his little daughter María Teresa to this disease six years before, decided they had to find a way to banish smallpox for good from the rest of his empire. The royal doctor who had translated the first vaccination instructional from French to Spanish, Dr. Francisco Javier de Balmis y Berenguer, was the man Charles IV had been waiting for.

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indias, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna, an expedition that would spread the vaccine, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Spanish Empire.

The Balmis Expedition, as it was more popularly called, carried first the cure to the Canarian Islands, and from there traveled to America. Upon arriving to the Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and other countries), the expedition divided into two, with Balmis marching north towards New Spain (México) and Cuba and his second-in-command José Salvany y Lleopart going south to the Viceroyalty of Peru, and Balmis later traveled to Philippines. The expedition found many difficulties through the road, as Balmis was denied more orphan children to continue the human chain in México and had to use black slaves, while Salvany fell ill of up to ''three'' other diseases and would die not much after, not to count superstitious indigenous that were wary of the whole thing, but the expedition endured all of this and kept on. Added to the eforts to Dr. Francisco Oller, Dr. Tomás Romay and Dr. Alejandro García de Arboleya, who had already introduced the vaccine in several points of the empire, and Dr. Santiago Granado y Navarro Calderón, who replaced Salvany in the expedition, they managed to immunize hundreds of thousands of people.

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of the nearby British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Macau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, and did the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he returned to Europe by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he commented, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." Although it remains little known in modern pop culture, it has notably returned to Spanish collective memory after the 2000s, generating a fair bit of fiction about it over there.

to:

The Balmis Expedition, technically known as the ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna'' ("Royal Philantropic Expedition of the Vaccine"), could be accurately described as the first medical campaign in history, underwent by the Spanish Empire in 1803, and literally PoweredByAForsakenChild.

In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives more intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous, indigenous themselves, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives who allied to with the Spaniards, but few modern people care about those anyway) during the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly massive huge number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in [[BiologicalWeaponsSolveEverything biological warfare to depopulate their new lands, lands]], even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, as they used to say in Extremadura, homeland to many conquistadores, is very however, could not be different.

Regardless of its devastation abroad, smallpox was still lethal in Europe up to the 18th century. Back then, the known way to immunize people against the disease was variolation, a primitive and rather squicky procedure that involved extracting pus from infected pustules and injecting it into the subject, intending to inoculating him with an underfed form of the virus that would be more manageable, manageable to build immunity, but this procedure was dangerous and often risked spreading the disease itself. Fortunately, an English doctor by the name of Edward Jenner made a great discovery in 1796: variolation worked much better when inoculating cowpox, a process we now call vaccination (from ''vaca'').''vaccina'', Latin for something related to cows). However, this method still had a big problem, namely that the extracted fluid could not be kept fresh for more than ten days, and given that there was no cowpox in America, transporting there the demanded cure for smallpox proved quite a challenge. When continental Spain managed to get the vaccine in 1800, King Charles IV, who had lost his little daughter María Teresa to this disease six years before, decided they had to find a way to banish smallpox for good from the rest of his empire. The royal doctor who had translated the first vaccination instructional from French to Spanish, Dr. Francisco Javier de Balmis y Berenguer, was the man Charles IV had been waiting for.

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indias, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a Real ''Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna, Vacuna'', an expedition that would kickstart the spread of the vaccine, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl that helped defeat Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Spanish Empire.

Hispanic Monarchy.

The Balmis Expedition, as it was more popularly called, carried first the cure to the Canarian Islands, and from there traveled to America. Upon arriving to the Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and other countries), the expedition divided into two, with Balmis marching north towards New Spain (México) and Cuba and while his second-in-command José Salvany y Lleopart going went south to the Viceroyalty of Peru, and Balmis later traveled to Philippines. The expedition found many difficulties through the road, as Balmis was denied more orphan children to continue the human chain in México and had to use black slaves, while Salvany fell ill of up to ''three'' other diseases and would die not much after, not to count superstitious indigenous that were wary of the whole thing, but the expedition endured all of this and kept on. Added to the eforts efforts to Dr. Francisco Oller, Dr. Tomás Romay and Dr. Alejandro García de Arboleya, who had already introduced the vaccine in several points of the empire, and Dr. Santiago Granado y Navarro Calderón, who replaced Salvany in the expedition, they managed to immunize hundreds of thousands of people.

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of the their nearby British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Macau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, and did doing the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children children, their mission finished, settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he returned to Europe by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he commented, stated, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." Although The event also served to give Jenner himself a boost of attention, and also gave UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte the idea to vaccinate his own troops in 1805, after which he awarded a medal to Jenner despite being at war with Britain at the time (he ignored Balmis, although that's hardly new for a Spaniard). In 1810, even with Napoleon having invaded Spain, Balmis would undertake a new expedition to the Indias to check up the effects of his previous venture, and organized it so the vaccine would continue reaching the corners of the empire. He would die nine years later.

The expedition
remains little known in modern pop culture, it has notably returned to Spanish collective memory after the 2000s, generating a fair bit of fiction about it over there.
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In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives allied to the Spaniards, but few people care about those anyway) during the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly massive number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21th century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in biological warfare to depopulate their new lands, even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, as they used to say in Extremadura, homeland to many conquistadores, is very another.

to:

In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives allied to the Spaniards, but few people care about those anyway) during the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly massive number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21th 21st century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in biological warfare to depopulate their new lands, even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, as they used to say in Extremadura, homeland to many conquistadores, is very another.
different.



In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indias, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna, an expedition that would spread the vaccine, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccined people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl thatt helped defeating Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Spanish Empire.

to:

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indias, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna, an expedition that would spread the vaccine, so the question now was how to carry it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh fluid for months: he would gather unvaccined unvaccinated people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl thatt that helped defeating defeat Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Spanish Empire.



The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of the nearby British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Maccau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, and did the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he arrived to Europa by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he commented, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." Although it reimains little known in modern pop culture, it has notably returned to Spanish collective memory after the 2000s, generating a fair bit of fiction about it over there.

to:

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of the nearby British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Maccau Macau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, and did the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he arrived returned to Europa Europe by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he commented, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." Although it reimains remains little known in modern pop culture, it has notably returned to Spanish collective memory after the 2000s, generating a fair bit of fiction about it over there.

Added: 134

Changed: 383

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[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fjbalmis.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:Francisco Javier de Balmis.]]



In 1803, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna, an expedition that would take the cure to the Indias, so the question now was how to carry the cure through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh cure for months: he would gather unvaccined people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl thatt helped defeating Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Spanish Empire.

The Balmis Expedition, as it was more popularly called, carried first the cure to the Canarian Islands, and from there traveled to America. Upon arriving to the Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and other countries), the expedition divided into two, with Balmis marching north towards New Spain (México) and Cuba and his second-in-command José Salvany y Lleopart going south to the Viceroyalty of Peru, and Balmis later derived unto Philippines. The expedition found many difficulties through the road, as Balmis was denied more orphan children to continue the human chain in México and had to use black slaves, while Salvany fell ill of up to ''three'' other diseases and would die not much after, not to count indigenous that were wary of the whole thing, but the expedition endured all of this, and with the help of Dr. Francisco Oller and Dr. Tomás Romay (who had already introduced the vaccine in Puerto Rico and Cuba) and Dr. Santiago Granado y Navarro Calderón (who replaced Salvany), they managed to immunize hundreds of thousands of people through the entire empire.

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of their British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Maccau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, and did the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he arrived to Europa by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he commented, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." Although it reimains known in modern pop culture, it has notably returned to Spanish collective memory after the 2000s, generating a fair bit of fiction about it over there.

to:

In 1803, after a large smallpox outbreak had just exploded in the Indias, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna, an expedition that would take spread the cure to the Indias, vaccine, so the question now was how to carry the cure it through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh cure fluid for months: he would gather unvaccined people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl thatt helped defeating Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Spanish Empire.

The Balmis Expedition, as it was more popularly called, carried first the cure to the Canarian Islands, and from there traveled to America. Upon arriving to the Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and other countries), the expedition divided into two, with Balmis marching north towards New Spain (México) and Cuba and his second-in-command José Salvany y Lleopart going south to the Viceroyalty of Peru, and Balmis later derived unto traveled to Philippines. The expedition found many difficulties through the road, as Balmis was denied more orphan children to continue the human chain in México and had to use black slaves, while Salvany fell ill of up to ''three'' other diseases and would die not much after, not to count superstitious indigenous that were wary of the whole thing, but the expedition endured all of this, this and with kept on. Added to the help of eforts to Dr. Francisco Oller and Oller, Dr. Tomás Romay (who and Dr. Alejandro García de Arboleya, who had already introduced the vaccine in Puerto Rico and Cuba) several points of the empire, and Dr. Santiago Granado y Navarro Calderón (who Calderón, who replaced Salvany), Salvany in the expedition, they managed to immunize hundreds of thousands of people through the entire empire.

people.

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of their the nearby British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Maccau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, and did the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he arrived to Europa by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he commented, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." Although it reimains little known in modern pop culture, it has notably returned to Spanish collective memory after the 2000s, generating a fair bit of fiction about it over there.




to:

* The graphic novel ''El mar recordará nuestros nombres'' by Javier de Isusi was released in 2021.
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Added DiffLines:

In the 15th and 16th centuries, the contact between Spaniards and American indigenous peoples had unexpected biological consequences. A new STD hailing from the Indias, the infamous syphilis, jumped to the Old World when crewmembers of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, overeager to know the natives intimately, did the deed with native women. In turn, diseases from the Old World like smallpox attacked the indigenous, ravaging their unfamiliar organisms and causing a high death toll among the Mexicas that resisted Spanish assimilation (and also among the natives allied to the Spaniards, but few people care about those anyway) during the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico. The indigenous side of the exchange received the worst part, suffering an ultimately unknown but undoubtedly massive number of deaths across the whole continent, which has influenced some imaginative 21th century people into accusing the inevitably dastardly Spanish Empire of having engaged in biological warfare to depopulate their new lands, even although this would only destroy the purpose of their conquest in the first place by depriving them of subjects. The reality, as they used to say in Extremadura, homeland to many conquistadores, is very another.

Regardless of its devastation abroad, smallpox was still lethal in Europe up to the 18th century. Back then, the known way to immunize people against the disease was variolation, a primitive and rather squicky procedure that involved extracting pus from infected pustules and injecting it into the subject, intending to inoculating him with an underfed form of the virus that would be more manageable, but this procedure was dangerous and often risked spreading the disease itself. Fortunately, an English doctor by the name of Edward Jenner made a great discovery in 1796: variolation worked much better when inoculating cowpox, a process we now call vaccination (from ''vaca''). However, this method still had a big problem, namely that the extracted fluid could not be kept fresh for more than ten days, and given that there was no cowpox in America, transporting there the demanded cure for smallpox proved quite a challenge. When continental Spain managed to get the vaccine in 1800, King Charles IV, who had lost his little daughter María Teresa to this disease six years before, decided they had to find a way to banish smallpox for good from the rest of his empire. The royal doctor who had translated the first vaccination instructional from French to Spanish, Dr. Francisco Javier de Balmis y Berenguer, was the man Charles IV had been waiting for.

In 1803, Charles IV gave his blessings to Balmis' proposition of a Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna, an expedition that would take the cure to the Indias, so the question now was how to carry the cure through the empire in which the sun never set. However, Balmis eventually came up with a revolutionary method that combined both vaccination and variolation to keep generating fresh cure for months: he would gather unvaccined people and, dividing them in pairs, he would inoculate the first pair with cowpox, and before they healed, he would use their pus to inoculate the second, and so on. Knowing the procedure was safe and worked well with children, he approached Isabel Zendal Gómez, chairwoman of an orphanage in La Coruña, and recruited 22 orphan kids to serve as the beginning of the aforementioned human chain. All aboard of the ''María Pita'', a ship whose name remembered the ActionGirl thatt helped defeating Sir Francis Drake and his obscure English Armada in 1589, the expedition sailed off to America to undertake a new conquest, this time that of a disease that would never ravage again the subjects of the Spanish Empire.

The Balmis Expedition, as it was more popularly called, carried first the cure to the Canarian Islands, and from there traveled to America. Upon arriving to the Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and other countries), the expedition divided into two, with Balmis marching north towards New Spain (México) and Cuba and his second-in-command José Salvany y Lleopart going south to the Viceroyalty of Peru, and Balmis later derived unto Philippines. The expedition found many difficulties through the road, as Balmis was denied more orphan children to continue the human chain in México and had to use black slaves, while Salvany fell ill of up to ''three'' other diseases and would die not much after, not to count indigenous that were wary of the whole thing, but the expedition endured all of this, and with the help of Dr. Francisco Oller and Dr. Tomás Romay (who had already introduced the vaccine in Puerto Rico and Cuba) and Dr. Santiago Granado y Navarro Calderón (who replaced Salvany), they managed to immunize hundreds of thousands of people through the entire empire.

The expedition vaccinated whites, blacks, indigenous, mestizos, rich, poor and foreigners alike, which caused the interesting trivia fact that the Apache and Comanche tribes, which were part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time, would end up receiving the vaccine against smallpox thirty years earlier than the humble class of their British colonizers (something the Ohio natives would have surely used before Marshall Jeffery Amherst gifted them with blankets infected with smallpox). However, Balmis didn't limit its expedition to Spanish lands either. While he was doing the job in Philippines, knowing that China didn't have the vaccine yet, he convinced the Qing dynasty authorities to let him bring it to them, and so he did, leaving his place to Dr. Antonio Gutiérrez Robredo to finish things. Balmis reached the Portuguese city of Maccau from the Philippines, with shipwreck included, and spent some months vaccinating through China up to the province of Canton, and did the same in the British St. Helen islands in his way back to America. Granado would continue vaccinating through modern Argentine until 1812, while Isabel Zendal and the children settled down in various places of the empire.

The expedition sent shockwaves through the medical world of the time, which saw it as a turning point that likely saved millions upon millions of lives. Balmis was received as a hero when he arrived to Europa by way of Lisbon in 1806, and when Edward Jenner himself heard about its efforts, he commented, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this." Although it reimains known in modern pop culture, it has notably returned to Spanish collective memory after the 2000s, generating a fair bit of fiction about it over there.

!!In fiction:
[[AC:ComicBook]]
* Primo Ramón drew and wrote a comic book about the expedition, ''Nuevo Mundo. Isabel Zendal en la expedición de la vacuna'', in 2018.

[[AC:{{Film}}]]
* The 2016 TV movie ''22 Ángeles'' adapted the novel ''Ángeles custodios'', referred below, under the writing of Miguel Bardem, cousin to Creator/JavierBardem.

[[AC:{{Literature}}]]
* Julia Álvarez's 2006 short story ''Saving the World'' takes the point of view of the orphanage's chairwoman Isabel Zendal Gómez,.
* Almudena de Arteaga's novel ''Ángeles custodios'' has the expedition as its setting.
* The 2011 novel ''Los héroes olvidados'' by Antonio Villanueva Edo also addresses the expedition.
* Javier Neveo released another novel, ''Los niños de la vacuna'', in 2013.
* ''A flor de piel'', by Javier Moro, also stars Zendal.
* Another novel about the expedition is ''Los niños de la viruela'', authored in 2017 by María Solar.

[[AC:LiveActionTV]]
* ''Series/CuartoMilenio'' explored the Balmis Expedition in November 2020.

[[AC:WebOriginal]]
* It is also addressed in the podcast ''Podcast/FutilityCloset'' by Greg Ross.

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