1826–1837 cholera pandemic
| Second cholera pandemic | |
|---|---|
| Disease | Cholera | 
| Bacteria strain | Vibrio cholerae | 
| Location | Asia, Europe, the Americas | 
| First outbreak | Ganges Delta, British India | 
| Dates | 1826–1837 | 
| Confirmed cases | Unknown; 250,000 in Russia | 
| Deaths | Unknown; 100,000 in Russia; 100,000 in France; 6,536 in London | 
The second cholera pandemic (1826–1837), also known as the Asiatic cholera pandemic, was a cholera pandemic that reached from India across Western Asia to Europe, Great Britain, and the Americas, as well as east to China and Japan. Cholera caused more deaths than any other epidemic disease in the 19th century, and as such, researchers consider it a defining epidemic disease of the century. The medical community now believes cholera to be exclusively a human disease, spread through many means of travel during the time, and transmitted through warm fecal-contaminated river waters and contaminated foods. During the second pandemic, the scientific community varied in its beliefs about the causes of cholera.