Europe was hit with the Bubonic Plague, also known as The Black Death, in 1347 devastating the European Society. The Bubonic Plague was hard to get away from due to the conditions in Europe and took many lives. The Bubonic Plague also influenced religion and started changing the normal European society into a new one. The Bubonic Plague came to Europe in 1347. It was brought on ships with goods from Asia. The disease followed on trade routes as it swept through Europe. The manure and trash in Europe helped the disease spread and hard to get away from since the disease was carried by rats. The plague began with swellings as big as apples. The swellings spread as the body started to be covered in dark spots and sickness set in (document
In the 14th century the Black Death engulfed Europe killing an estimated 50 million people. The pandemic is considered extraordinary because it did so in a matter of months. This disease was carried by fleas, the Bubonic Plague is caused by a bacteria called Yersinia pestis, found mainly in rodents, in this case in rats, and the fleas that feed on them.
The Black Death, the most severe epidemic in human history, ravaged Europe from 1347-1351. This plague killed entire families at a time and destroyed at least 1,000 villages. Greatly contributing to the Crisis of the Fourteenth Century, the Black Death had many effects beyond its immediate symptoms. Not only did the Black Death take a devastating toll on human life, but it also played a major role in shaping European life in the years following.
The Bubonic Plague was a spreading disease. It infected and killed most of the population of Europe within a few years. The plague began spreading in 1348 when fleas caused this infection when they bit animals such as rats. The bacteria entered the skin through the flea bite which soon infected the lymph nodes. These rats stowed away on trade ships which quickly passed this deadly disease to humans. The Bubonic plague was very disastrous to the European society until it finally began to slow down in 1351. It killed so many people due to its rapid spreading. It lowered the religious belief and trust in God by many people in the community. Also, the local physicians lacked the knowledge of the plagues symptoms and its cure.
The Bubonic Plague was an epidemic which tore through a developing and growing Europe. The lasting impact included the onset of the Dark Ages. The reasons why the Bubonic Plague was so devastating to European society include low sanitation quality, the continuing decline of public morale and the overall large number of lives lost. Each individual factor continued to depress the city allowing the plague to take complete advantage.
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.
When Bubonic Plague visited England in 1348, it was called the Great Mortality. We know it as the Black Death that lasted until 1352 and killed vast populations in Asia , North Africa , Europe , Iceland , and Greenland . In total, it extinguished as much as fifty percent of the world's population.
Plague, was a term that was applied in the Middle Ages to all fatal epidemic diseases, but now it is only applied to an acute, infectious, contagious disease of rodents and humans, caused by a short, thin, gram-negative bacillus. In humans, plague occurs in three forms: bubonic plague, pneumonic plague, and septicemic plague. The best known form is the bubonic plague and it is named after buboes, or enlarged, inflamed lymph nodes, which are characteristics of the plague in the groin or neck or armpit. Bubonic plague can only be transmitted by the bite of any of numerous insects that are normally parasitic on rodents and that seek new hosts when the original host dies. If the plague is left untreated
The Bubonic Plague, also known as the Black Death, is believed to have originated in China and was brought to Europe in the mid 1300s by traveling merchants. Outbreaks of this epidemic traveled across the continent and spared no one; neither young nor old were immune to its deadly powers. Its rapid spread decimated nearly half of the European population during a short period of less than 15 years. The plague dramatically affected all facets of everyday life, causing upheaval politically, socially, and economically.
The Black Death also known as, the Bubonic Plague was a disease that came out of the east so which first happened in China which spread across Europe in the years of 1346-53. This disease wiped out anywhere between 25% or 50% of the European population.
The Bubonic Plague or the Black Death came into Europe when twelve trade ships came into an Italian port, after a long trip through the black sea. When it came into port, the Italian people were shocked to find that many of the ships sailors were dead, and the remaining living were overcome with black oozing boils. To stop the spread of this plague, the Italian people sent the ship back out into the ocean, but alas it was too late. Over the next five years, this plague would become extremely contagious and would kill about a fifth of Europe’s population. Although this was the first time they had seen this plague come into their
The bubonic plague has been around for almost two thousand years. In most early cases the plague was spread from China along the Silk Road. The Silk Road was the over land trade route from the orient that silk, spices, and other trade able goods from the east to western Europe. In most cases rats carrying the Oriental Rat Flea or another animal carrying the flea would move to a new location. Once that animal died the flea would move to another host which could be a human. Once bitten by the flea a bubo begins to form when the bubo begins to ooze fluid the illness can then be passed through touch. As stated above in the Middle
The Bubonic/Black plague was one of the greatest atrocities that the world has ever known dating back to the 13th century. It was originally thought that the black death had originated from China and was transferred to the U.S but recent studies have shown reachersers that it may have originated in 1346 in the Steppe region (“Plague”). The disease was originally transferred to humans by rat fleas on ships, and eventually after a few days with no food, the hungry rat fleas would turn to the humans transferring the disease. Originally there were too
The reason the plague had spread so quickly in Europe was because filth littered the streets and gave rats the perfect environment to breed and increase their number. On top of being a highly littered area, people would not bathe very often so they were very dirty. The people had a lack of medical knowledge so they did not know who to stop the disease from spreading, like using antibiotics. Also the church sent people on religious trips (pilgrimages), which was a bad idea because people that were infected were being put in the same area as people that were completely healthy causing it to spread even more.
Who knew the world's population would diminish because of a disease.Yes, the disease that killed 25 million people in 1347 is back. Except this time it's worse. Its called Bubonic Plague and this time, it can’t be stopped.
Around the years 1347 and 1351 A.D., the Black Death bore its wrath on Europe. The Black Death, or the Bubonic plague, disrupted the economic, social, political, and cultural foundations of Europe as well as causing a major decline to the population (Spielvogel p.221). The plague was initially brought to Italy from the eastern Mongols via rats infested with plague ridden fleas where from there it spread to the rest of Europe (Christiansen, slide 3).