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Plague or The Plague may refer to:
(Not to be confused with plaque)
Contents |
Medicine
- Plague (disease), a specific disease caused by Yersinia pestis. There are three major manifestations:
- Any bubo-causing disease
- A pandemic caused by such a disease
- Any pestilence, a virulent and highly infectious disease.
Art and literature
- Plague (Böcklin), a painting by Arnold Böcklin
- Plague (2000 novel), a novel by Malcolm Rose
- Plague 99, a 1989 novel by Jean Ure
- The Plague, a novel by Albert Camus
- The Plague (Dragon Prince), an epidemic in Melanie Rawn's fantasy novel Dragon Prince
- The Plague (magazine), New York University's comedy magazine
Popular culture
- Plague, a 1987 LP by the band Klinik
- Plague (1978 film), a science-fiction genre film depicting a genetic engineering accident
- Plague (comics), a Marvel Comics character
- Plagues (album) the second album by The Devil Wears Prada
- The Plague (American band), a hardcore punk band from Cleveland
The Plague (New Zealand band) - The Plague (comics), a Cobra special forces team in the comic G.I. Joe: America's Elite
- The Plague (English band), an English punk rock band
- The Plague (film), a 2006 horror film
- "The Plague" (Father Ted), an episode of Father Ted
- The Plague (Brotha Lynch Hung album)
- The Plague EP, an EP by I Hate Sally
- The Plague (EP), an EP by Nuclear Assault
- The Plague (song), a song by Diary of Dreams
See also
- List of historical plagues
- Antonine Plague, an ancient pandemic in 165–189 AD brought to the Roman Empire by troops returning from campaigns in the Near East
- Black Death, also known as The Black Plague: the Eurasian pandemic beginning in the 14th century
- Capacitor plague, a condition afflicting computer motherboards in which capacitors fail
- Corrupted Blood incident, a virtual plague that occurred in the video game World of Warcraft
- Great Plague of London, a massive outbreak in England that killed an estimated 20% of London's population in 1665-1666
- Plague of Athens, a devastating epidemic which hit Athens in ancient Greece in 430 BC
- Plague of Justinian, a pandemic in 541–542 AD in the Byzantine Empire
- Plague Riot, a riot in Moscow in 1771 caused by an outbreak of bubonic plague
- Plagues of Egypt, the 10 calamities that God inflicted on Egypt in the book of Exodus
- Third Pandemic, a major plague pandemic that began in China in 1855
- Widespread influx of an animal species afflicting the environment and/or agriculture
- Plague is a term for a large group of grackles
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