The Black Death was and still is a very deadly disease. There were many effects it had on the trading economy. Also‚ “The Black Death” is still being carried around today‚ but it is very rare. The Black Death spread as quickly as it did because Europe was becoming richer‚ and trade was widespread. The Black Death had many names like “The Black Plague‚” but one of the less common names was Zoonosis. Zoonosis is a word people used for all sorts of life threatening diseases. They used zoonosis so people
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HOW DID THE BLACK DEATH AFFECT EUROPEAN SOCIETIES OF THE MID-FOURTEENTH CENTURY? How did the Black Death affect European societies of the mid-fourteenth century? The Black Death is the most significant natural phenomenon in human history and continues to be the subject of medical‚ historical and sociological analysis . The ‘first epidemic of the second plague pandemic’ devastated Europe between 1347 and 1351‚ killing 25 to 45% of Europe’s population (over 75 million people
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The Black Death The Black Death was an infectious disease that spread from Asia across to Europe in the 14th century. The Black Death lasted for three years‚ killing 60 percent of Europe’s population. The Black is a combination of three related diseases. The first disease was the bubonic plague. This was named this because of the buboes that appeared on the victim’s body. The second disease was the pulmonary/pneumonic plague. This disease attacked the victim’s lungs and were always fatal. The third
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The Black Death In Fourteenth Century Europe‚ there was a network of roads and sea routes were linked to create international trade. These trading ships were docked at a Port in Sicily (Italy) after a long journey through the Black Sea from Asia. This was a major trade route where Italian merchants traded for silks and spices to be brought to Europe. Apparently‚ Asian black rats carried fleas with the plague that somehow burrowed into the ship’s grain sacks. This is the theory of what caused the
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Education and the Knowledge-Based Economy in Europe EDUCATIONAL FUTURES RETHINKING THEORY AND PRACTICE Volume 24 Series Editors Michael A. Peters University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign‚ USA J. Freeman-Moir University of Canterbury‚ Christchurch‚ New Zealand Editorial Board Michael Apple‚ University of Wisconsin-Madison‚ USA Miriam David‚ Department of Education‚ Keele University‚ UK Cushla Kapitzke‚ The University of Queensland‚ Elizabeth Kelly‚ DePaul University‚ USA Simon
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How does Black Death Impact the Medieval History According to Robert s. Gottfried The Black Death‚ “the black death was defined as a combination of bubonic‚ pneumonic‚ and septicaemic plague strains. It devastated the Western world from 1347 to 1351‚ killing 25%-50% of Europe’s population and causing or accelerating marked political‚ economic‚ social‚ and cultural changes. People were astounded‚ bewildered‚ and terrified.” (Gottfried Robert S.‚ The Black Death; Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval
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The Black Death was a plague that devastated Europe during the 14th and 15th Century. Before the plague‚ Europe was in the Late Middle Ages‚ a time of both development and problems. Some of these problems were causes of the plague. The Black Death has changed Europe economically by causing people to pay for religious services‚ making nobles pay higher wages to peasants and serfs and helping peasants gain money. Socially‚ the Black Death caused the downfall of feudalism and created discrimination
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swept over the known world. The Great Plague‚ Great Pestilence‚ and Black Death were a few of the names that it was given. In the Background Essay‚ it states that‚ "the plague killed between 25 and 45% of the populations it encountered." It was played a huge role in the history of the 14th century. There were three bacterial strains of the plague; all of them were deadly. According to Document 2‚ the mortality rate was 31% in Europe‚ 33% in England‚ 25-33% in Egypt‚ and 33% in Syria. About one third
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Black Death & Plague Works Cited 1. Benedictow‚ Ole J. "The Black Death." History Today 55.3 (2005): 42-49. History Reference Center. Web. 4 Oct. 2012. 2. COHN‚ SAMUEL. "After The Black Death: Labour Legislation And Attitudes Towards Labour In Late-Medieval Western Europe." Economic History Review 60.3 (2007): 486-512. History Reference Center. Web. 4 Oct. 2012. 3. Harvey‚ Mary‚ and Suzanne McCabe. "World History: The Black Death." Junior Scholastic 114.12 (2012): 20. History Reference
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Europe and the Dutch economy: Influences of the European Union on the Netherlands The Hague University Sofia Verbaas 12022616 Adriana Lopez 12009377 Summary In this research about the Dutch economy and the European Union‚ is the central question: Is the European Union good for the Dutch economy? The answer of the question was answered in several steps. We had an interview with a teacher and mostly we did desk research. We interviewed a teacher of the Hague
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