Cholera, malaria, influenza and now Covid-19 have all sown terror and uncertainty across the world, sparing no one, regardless of age, gender, or ethnicity. Yet, much like these modern plagues, disease has haunted humanity throughout its history. After the Black Death ravaged 14th-century Eurasia, the bubonic plague became an enduring spectre of mortality, resurfacing periodically in smaller outbreaks—a grim reminder that its shadow never truly lifted, even as other scourges took centre stage.