In the summer of 1485, a terrifying new disease arrived in England. It struck with unimaginable speed: a victim could be perfectly healthy at breakfast and dead from severe, foul-smelling sweats by dinner. It did not target the poor in crowded slums, but rather the wealthy, the strong, and the aristocratic. It was known as the English Sweating Sickness. The Tudor Sweat dives into one of the greatest unsolved mysteries in medical history. Over the next seven decades, this bizarre pathogen caused five massive outbreaks, repeatedly forcing King Henry VIII to flee his court in absolute panic. Then, abruptly in 1551, the disease vanished entirely. It has never been seen since. This book tracks the frantic efforts of Tudor physicians to understand an invisible killer that defied all medical logic of the era. Modern epidemiologists and virologists still argue over its true nature was it an ancient form of hantavirus, a mutated influenza, or something entirely alien to modern science?Step into the damp, panicked halls of the 16th century. Uncover the chilling true story of the sweating sickness, a grim reminder of how suddenly nature can rewrite the rules of survival.