According to Michel Tibayrunc's
Encyclopedia of Infectious Diseases, the first mention of the iconic plague doctor is found during a 1619 plague outbreak in Paris, in a biography of royal physician Charles de Lorme, serving King
Louis XIII of France at the time. After De Lorme, German engraver Gerhart Altzenbach published a famous illustration in 1656, which publisher Paulus Fürst's iconic (1656) is based upon. In this
satirical work, Fürst describes how the doctor does nothing but terrify people and take money from the dead and dying. The city of
Orvieto hired Matteo Angelo as a plague doctor in 1348 for four times a normal doctor's rate of 50
florins per year.
Pope Clement VI hired several extra plague doctors during the
Black Death plague to tend to the sick people of
Avignon. Of 18 doctors in
Venice, only one was left by 1348: five had died of the plague, and 12 were missing and may have fled. ==Methods and tasks==