The Plague of Justinian is the first documented‚ but the least known case of the bubonic plague. Beginning in 541 AD‚ the Plague of Justinian occurred during Emperor Justinian’s reign originating from Egypt then rapidly moving to Constantinople through trade routes. The disease quickly spread throughout the Mediterranean and as far as England and Ireland‚ lasting for about two hundred years. This paper will focus on the first outbreak during 541 AD – 544 AD in Constantinople and the Byzantine Empire
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The plague‚ which is caused by Yersinia pestis‚ a gram-negative rod-shaped‚ non-motile‚ non-sporulating bacterium has a great historical significance. Plague is a zoonotic disease transmitted to humans by rodents (e.g.‚ rats‚ mice‚ ground squirrels). Fleas that live on the rodents can transmit the bacteria to humans‚ who then suffer from the bubonic form of plague. The bubonic form may progress to the septicemic and pneumonic forms. Pneumonic plague would be the predominant form having potential
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The plague/Black Death first popped up the the 13th century. A ship had arrived in Europe with many people that had the Black Death. They had symptoms that included fever‚ unable to eat‚ pain that was so bad they became crazy. One of the weirdest symptoms is having black boils on their skin. Boils are infected places of the skin that become full of pus and become swollen. The Black Death is caused by a bacteria called Yersinia pestis. The bacteria is most common in animals. It got passed to humans
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most people know it today as The Plague‚ killed more than 20 million people in Europe and Asia in the Late Middle Ages. This horrific disease affected all aspects of life during the time. The population decreased by more than 60 percent. The Black Death got its name from the black boils that oozed blood and pus from all of its victims. These were called "buboes" and appeared black on the skin. "Blood and pus seeped out of these strange swellings‚
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asking Pharaoh to let his people go. However‚ Pharaoh refused. Because of Pharaoh’s refusal‚ God sent plagues. These plagues included sending frogs‚ boils‚ and darkness to the land of Egypt. In most of the plagues‚ however‚ the Israelites were not affected. God kept sending these plagues until the last plague‚ the plague that took the lives of all the firstborn sons of Ancient Egypt. After that plague‚ Pharaoh decided to let the Israelites go. After the Israelites started exiting Egypt‚ Pharaoh had
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to the start of the plague. During the Medieval Ages‚ the people of Europe were oblivious as how it a plague could’ve started. Sure there were doctors and nurses but none knew how to cure the disease completely. The notion of the plague being an act of God comes from the Book of Revelation dealing with the Four Horsemen **5. One of the Four Horsemen‚ famine and disease‚ was said to have directly affected the economy of this society‚ making food more vulnerable to gain. The plague became an act of terror
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a massive difference between the Christians’ and Muslims’ reactions based on the overall context‚ the causes behind the disease‚ and the behavior of the people during the time. The first three documents describe the general context in which the plague is found. Document one is a map showing the spread of the disease in the Middle East. The line show the patterns in which the people migrated across the land to different cities. The Christians did not have a specific “holy city” in Europe‚ so they
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The Bubonic Plague is a disease that started around 1346 in China. This disease was very deadly. “In five short years the plague killed around 25 to 45 percent of the population where it struck”. Back then knowledge of bacteria and germs were largely unknown to doctors. There were three types of plague‚ bubonic‚ septicemic‚ and pneumonic. The Christian and Muslim people had very different views on this disease‚ but they had also had very few similarities. Here are a some reasons explaining this theory::
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the Bubonic Plague‚ broke out in China and very quickly swept across the European continent. The Christian and Muslim populations were vastly effected with mortality rates as high as thirty-three percent. Although both religions were affected‚ the Christian and Muslims had very controversial outlooks and responses to the Bubonic Plague. The most argued opinion coming from these two religions was whether or not the plague was a good or bad thing. The Islamic community felt that the plague was a blessing
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different classes. People live their lives according to the inequality that is established by society. The only time people are truly equal is once they are done living. People are only equal in the eyes of death. No one can escape mortality. Both The Plague‚ by Albert Camus as translated by Stuart Gilbert‚ and Rashomon‚ by Akutagawa as translated by Jay Rubin‚ use setting and characterization to make clear the theme death has as the great equalizer. The setting that is created in a piece of literature
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