The Bubonic Plague is also known as the Black Death which spread from south-west China and carried by fleas on rodents, merchants, and travelers. It affected China and Europe the most. India, Africa, and northward places were unaffected.…
Around 1339 in northwestern Europe, the population was beginning to outgrow the food supply and a severe economic crisis began to take place. The winters were extremely cold and the summers were dry. Due to this extreme weather, very low crops yielded and those that grew were dying. Inflation became a common occurrence and as famine broke out, people began to worry. The time period of approximately 1339 to 1346 is now known as the famine before the plague (history). These seven bad years of weather and famine lead to the greatest plague of all times. In 1347, endemic to Asia, The Black Death began spreading throughout Western Europe. Over the time of three years, the plague killed one third of the population in Europe with roughly twenty five million people dead (bbc.co). The Black Death killed more Europeans than any other endemic or war up to that time, greatly impacting the Church, family life, and the economy. These three social pillars were changed forever.…
THE BLACK DEATH had infected everyone in Europe, killing 1/3 of the entire European population, starting the year 1348. The disease was brought to Europe on ships/boats by fleas. The fleas then infected the rats, which infected everyone else. Long and short-term impacts were caused by the Black Death, and some couldn’t be resolved for centuries.…
The Black Death is one of the most deadly epidemics in human history, and is taught in schools throughout the world. Though it is most known to have killed 50 million people in Europe it also ravaged Asia killing 25 million people. The Black Death is a type of plague called the Bubonic plague. Encyclopedia Britannica defines the Bubonic plague as, “an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. Bubonic plague is the most commonly occurring type of plague and is characterized by the appearance of buboes—swollen, tender lymph nodes, typically found in the armpits and groin.” The Bubonic plague has surfaced nine times in human history: the Plague of Justinian (541-542), the Black Death (1346-1353), the Great Plague of Milan (1629-1631),…
The Bubonic Plague started in Europe in the fourteenth century. The plague had wiped out nearly one third of the population and did not single anyone out, regardless of age, gender, or religion. All of this occurred as a result of a single fleabite. Bubonic Plague also known as Black Death started in Asia and traveled to Europe by ships. The Bubonic Plague was an infectious disease spread by fleas living on rats which would attached themselves to travelers to be later spread to a city or region. During the Bubonic Plague there were also many different beliefs and concerns, which include fear, religious and supernatural superstition, and a change of response from the fifteenth to eighteen century.…
The Bubonic Plague was first started in China or Russia but quickly spread to Western Europe. The results of the plague were that everything and everyone became frightened and confused. There was such over crowding in the cities that the…
The black plague affect everyone in the city or place that it was spreading in. People were dying everyday from this disease. Millions of people died because of the bacteria on the fleas that were carried on the back of black rats.The bubonic plague originally came from china and then was spread to europe. According to epidemics of the past: Bubonic plague, “The bubonic plague, better known as the “The Black Death,” has existed for thousands of years. The first recorded case of the plague was in China in 224 B.C.E. But the most significant outbreak was in Europe in the mid-fourteenth century. Over a five-year period from 1347 to 1352, 25 million people died” (1). This textual evidence proves that the bubonic plague, known as the black plague made europe at the time extremely dark because it had killed around 25 million people. People would come around with wheelbarrows and just take the bodies and catapult them to their enemies. People would also throw their trash and their waste out their windows, which was making people really sick. This textual evidence helps support the claim of The black plague in the time period between 400 ad and 1400 ad made europe at the time dark because a quarter of 100 million people died in the…
The Black Death also known as the Bubonic Plague and many other names, devastated European society by affecting its economy, social structure, government, and church in a series of outbreaks taking place years apart for over 300 years. When the Black Death began to surface for the first time people panicked and believed in supernatural reasons that had caused the plague but during the course of time different groups of people such as the state or government, the middle class, and the church either began to have a different attitude towards the plague like a rational or selfish point of view or they kept believing in supernatural beings that caused the plague.…
The Black Death was one of the deadliest and most impactful events that the world has ever witnessed. It is believed that the plague originated in Asia and it began to spread to other parts of the world around 1345 to 1346 when the plague struck water for the first time. Supposedly, this happened when Yanibeg, a khan of the Golden Horde, which was a part of the Mongol Empire, began catapulting the bodies of plague victims over its walls into the Black Sea. Once the plague hit the Black Sea, there was no hope of stopping it from its inevitable onslaught. The Genoese and Mediterranean coastline now laid open to an attack from the disease. The Black Death began to spread all over the world, but it did most of its damage throughout Europe. By the end of the fourteenth century, Europe had lost nearly half of its total population that it contained prior to the plague. However, the plague brought more consequences than just widespread death. The economy and social structure of Europe would…
The Bubonic Plague or the Black Death has been in the history books since the medieval times. This deadly disease has claimed nearly 1.5 million lives in Europe (Gottfried). The Black Death hit Europe in October of 1347 and quickly spread through most of Europe by the end of 1349 and continued on to Scandinavia and Russia in the 1350s. Not only did the plague effect the European population by killing one-third to two-thirds (Gottfried), it also hurt the social and economic structures of every European society.…
The Black Plague was one of the deadliest diseases in human history, significantly affecting Europe between late 1347 and 1353. The Black Plague, or The Black Death, killed millions of people. Greatly affecting Europe, The Black Plague changed the course of European History, in ways people never imagined.…
A bubonic plague, also known as the Black Death, spread through Western Europe from 1348-1349. It killed about 25%-50% of the entire population of Western Europe. This plague changed Europe’s society and some of the changes would last a long time. The Black Death changed the society of Europe by causing many religious groups to blame religions, the demand of labor to go up, and rebellions of the common folk.…
The plague began in Asia, traveling from Asia and infecting most of the Muslim world, it spread all the way to Europe. This became the disease the people knew as The Black Death. The bubonic plague was the cause of such terror that it ripped apart the very fabric of society. An Italian writer of the time wrote on how the plague split up society:…
The Black Death was and still is the most devastating pandemics ever to exist. The Black Death has been thought to have originated in Central Asia. From there it traveled to the Silk Road and Crimea. After the Black Death spread through Crimea it infected rat fleas with the disease and it was carried by the rat fleas into the Mediterranean and Europe. From the year 1346 to 1353 the Black Death killed approximately 200 million people throughout Eurasia and Europe.…
The Black Death infected an extensive part of the world with the disastrous bubonic plague. In addition to the Black Death spreading around Europe, it spread to Africa and the Middle East. The plague was first reported in Caffa, Crimea. The plague then spread to Sicily, Genoa, Venice, Pisa, and Marseilles. As the disease rapidly spread, it spread to France, Portugal, Spain, England, Germany, and Scandinavia.…