The Bubonic Plague (Black Death) was a disease that was spread the spring of 1348. It was spread by fleas on rodents and tread routes. It had deadly symptoms. People was accusatory when the symptoms spread. The Bubonic Plague was a devastating disease.…
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.…
(Pollard, 402) and revived political and economic stability that would later be known as the Renaissance. (Carlisle) Originating in Asia, the Black Plague infected peoples from China to Europe and killed an estimated 40 million. The Black Plague took three distinctive forms: The most common form of the disease was known as the Bubonic Plague. This disease was spread by infected fleas that attached themselves to rats- rats were known to dwell in heavily populated areas like the cities and would travel on ships to other countries further spreading the virus.…
The Black Death swept throughout Western Europe like wildfire from 1347 to 1349, devastating the European population. In just this short amount of time, this horrifying plague killed between 25% to 50% of the entire Western Europe, which was more than any pestilence had beforehand or since. This Black Death, otherwise known as the Bubonic Plague, was caused by a bad bacteria (Yersinia pestis) that inhabited fleas, which lived on rats. Then, these infected rat fleas started infecting people with the fatal bacteria, and contaminated people started infecting others, therefore it was a rapid chain-reaction. Because of the Black Death, many changes occurred in society, such as people seeking a source to blame, society and the economy shifting, and peasants rebelling.…
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 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 was a disastrous plague that struck Europe in October of 1317. It was spread by infected trading ships that arrived in Sicilian harbors. As the plague took people by storm, it spread throughout Germany and England and then up to the Baltic States. This horrifying mass murderous disease took the lives of 75 million people, something that shook the lives of everyone during the Middle Ages. This epidemic affected the social, economic, and religious aspects of the medieval culture.…
The Black death was a murderous plague that swept through Europe between 1347 and 1351. How this happened? Well, traders from central and eastern Europe brought rats that were transporting a disease. They transported these rats by ship.…
The Black Plague was one of the worst pandemics of Europe affecting one-third of the population. Caused by the bacillus Yersinia Pestis, the epidemic was carried through fleas and rats that accompanied Genoese ships. The first known outbreak in Europe started in 1346 and swept from the Mongol Empire to southern France and Spain. Street conditions and warm weather were ideal for the spread and made people more susceptible to the disease. Many physicians tried to come up with ways to prevent the disease but were unsuccessful in finding a cure.…
The Bubonic Plague, also famously known as The Black Death, was the life-threatening disease that hit Europe in 1346 after originating in Central Asia. The disease spread when rats which carried rat fleas, would board along merchants ships, that being said it spread while Central Asia was trading with the Mediterranean and Europe. The Black Death cause over 100 million of deaths, which was one of the most devastating times in history due to the mass loss of population that the Bubonic Plague…
Up from the murky depths of the Middle Ages crept a devastatingly horrific and terrifying disease. Responsible for the deaths of millions, this disease, or plague was known as the Black Death. Although there is no certainty as to the location where the plague originated from, it is known that its deadly bacteria came from the foul belly of a single flea. When the Black Death began to take hold, unimaginable fear, panic and chaos swept through the hearts of Europe's people; the rich and the poor alike.…
In just three short years between 1347 and 1350 one in every four people in Europe died in one of the worst natural disasters in history, the Black Plague. By 1352 it would wipe out a third of Europe's population. Also known as the Black Death, the Black Plague started in China where infected rats passed the disease to fleas that quickly spread it to humans. It quickly killed the majority of victims it touched, usually within mere hours. What might have seemed at first like an epidemic quickly took on pandemic proportions. It was named the Black Plague because of large black boils that would form at the site of glands. However, there were actually three different types of plague: bubonic, pneumonic and septicemic. Bubonic plague was the most common, spread by fleas and rodents. Lymph nodes would swell in the armpits, neck and groin, to the size of an egg or apple, and would turn black from sub dermal bleeding. Flu-like symptoms included nausea, vomiting, headaches, aching and high fever, but often people died with no other symptoms but swollen glands.…
The plague can be contracted by insect bites such as the fleas or airborne, such as the cough of an infected individual. In both cases, victims rarely lasted more than three to four days between the beginning of the infection and death. Some of the first symptoms of the Bubonic Plague were vomiting, dizziness, headaches, shivering, tongue turns white, and intolerance to light. Some of the later symptoms are pains in the joints, breaking blood vessels, internal bleeding, and your skin turns black as a result of dried blood from internal bleeding. This is what gave the plague its nickname "The Black Death." One-third to one-half of the entire European population succumbed to this ghastly death. While the Bubonic Plague left intense devastation on Europe it also had profound influences on Europe and its people, both negative and…
The first source states that “it reached Europe in the late 1340s, killing about 25 million people”. The Black Plague was not only terrifying in its grotesque symptoms, but also terrifying for the sheer number of people that died from it. At this point in history, there was nothing as significant as the Black Plague because there was nothing else that had so completely affected the world. An event surrounding the Black Death was the war in China and the spreading of this disease through different animals that can carry fleas, which were the main source of the plague. According to source three, the plague “having originated in China and Inner Asia, the Black Death decimated the army of the Kipchak Khan Janibeg while he was besieging the Genoese trading port of Kaffa (now Feodsiya) in Crimea (1347).…
Three major plague pandemics have occurred throughout history. The first originated in Africa in the 6th century and claimed the lives of one hundred million people within 60 years. The second pandemic, known as ‘The Black Death’ began in the14th century and killed up to one quarter of Europe’s population. The final pandemic in 1860 began in China and was transmitted via infected rats on steamships to port cities over the following 20 years.…