On the wall inside the Main Hall of the Old County Hall of
Oxfordshire in
New Road, an inscription reads: From the time of the
Black Death in the mid-14th century until the second half of the 19th century, Oxford was regularly visited by
plague,
cholera,
smallpox and
typhoid fevers. In 1348, the
Black Death reduced the city's population to such an extent that
Gloucester College (from which
Gloucester Green derives its name) was forced to close. In 1571,
Oxford University had to postpone the start of term because of an outbreak of plague, and the '
gaol fever' six years later may have been part of the same epidemic, being considered more worthy of note because its victims included the
Lord Chief Baron and the
Lord High Sheriff. This account of disease is reflected in a number of sources. An early
Chronicle records: A 19th-century account is more sure of the cause: Other accounts reject the notion of disease as a cause: Further accounts merely attribute the deaths to a curse supposedly uttered by Rowland Jenkes. ==Popular culture==