The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe The Black Death by Robert S. Gottfried, tells the story of the deadly plague and the following second plague pandemic that swept across Europe in the mid fourteenth century killing about half of the population. The book explains how the many factors lead to the plague becoming very enormous throughout Europe such as the environment and the great empire of the Mongols. The history of medieval Europe from the book gives the reader a dramatic glimpse of the awful conditions that were present in the time of the diseases. Many changes to the environment, such as the deforestation of many lands and climate change led to the plague’s success in Europe. The plague was able to move great distances because of man and able to thrive because of the climate changes. The author brings up an important idea of how the plague crossed by land from Asia to Europe by the Mongol Empire from their trade routes. Gottfried doesn't give a lot of information about how the plague came to be and just describes how the disease was transferred from the pests to man in the beginning and then how quickly it spread across the world. It would have been interesting to see Gottfried's opinion on how the plague …show more content…
He uniquely tells the stories of the major towns and nations that was hit with the plague. He uses articles in that time period to describe in detail how the plague was affecting the villages or rural areas of that time the plague was present. The use of primary sources directly from the time period is what makes the book so interesting. He gets articles from all sorts of different people across Europe and from different backgrounds. This allows the reader to see how the plague affected the poor to nobility and even the church to also how it affected people from rural areas to people in huge cities such as
The Black Death discusses the causes and results of the plague that devastated medieval Europe. It focuses on the many effects it had on the culture of medieval Europe and the possibility that it expedited cultural change. I found that Robert S. Gottfried had two main theses in the book. He argued that rodent and insect life cycles, as well as the changing of weather systems affect plague. He claimed that the devastation plague causes is partly due to its perpetual recurrences. Plague ravaged Europe in cycles, devastated the people when they were recuperating. As can be later discovered in the book, the cycles of plague consumed the European population. A second thesis, which he described in greater detail,
"The Black Death" is known as the worst natural disaster in European history. The plague spread throughout Europe from 1346-1352. Those who survived lived in constant fear of the plague's return and it did not disappear until the 1600s. Not only were the effects devastating at the time of infection, but during the aftermath as well. "The Black Death" of the fourteenth century dramatically altered Europe's social and economic structure.
The Black Death was one of the most life-changing pandemics in history. It was first discovered 550 years later in the 1800s by Alexandre Yersin, a french biologist. In his honor, the plague was named Yersinia Pestis. The plague traveled in two major ways. Yersin discovered that it traveled by infected fleas; the flea would attempt to feed on a human or animal and would then regurgitate the disease into the new host, further spreading the illness. Urban areas across Europe were populous with rats, which were one of the main hosts of the plague. These rodents spread the Black Death throughout cities in days. The unaffected still were not safe if they did not come in contact with an infected flea or rat. The plague also traveled pneumonically, or through the air. It caused large boils full of blood and pus, which would pop and spread. Another symptom was coughing, which was one of the many ways of proliferation. The disease eventually spread throughout Europe and killed a third of it’s population. It’s wrath caused many shortages, loss in hope, riots, and even some good things, such as many changes in art, science, and education. Therefore, the Black Death was one of the most life-changing pandemics in history.
History reveals the mid-14th century as a very unfortunate time for Europe. It was during this period when the continent became afflicted by a terrible plague. The source of the pathogen is known today as bubonic but was colloquially known as “The Black Death” to Europeans of the day. The plague caused a tremendous number of deaths and was a catalyst of change, severely impacting Europe’s cultural, political and religious institutions.
The carriers of this disease were rats and fleas. It first started off with fleas, then fleas would then jump on rats and the rats would give the disease to humans. The disease didn 't harm the fleas and the rats could only take so much without showing ill effects. Rats would get on ships and make everyone on the ships sick. This is how the Plague traveled.
The plague was a catastrophic time in history, and happened more than once. It took millions and millions of people’s lives. It destroyed cities and countries, and many people suffered from it.
Norman F. Cantor, In the Wake of the Plague (New York: Harper Collins First Perennial edition, 2001) examines how the bubonic plague, or Black Death, affected Europe in the fourteenth century. Cantor recounts specific events in the time leading up to the plague, during the plague, and in the aftermath of the plague. He wrote the book to relate the experiences of victims and survivors and to illustrate the impact that the plague had on the government, families, religion, the social structure, and art.
The black plague was a deadly disease that started in the mid-fourteenth century. There were many ways of the disease spreading throughout Europe. In 1346, Janibeg decided to cut off Kaffa’s trade routes by harboring in the ocean around it. Kaffa was on the verge of dying, but most of Janibeg’s soldiers aboard the ships had died from the plague, so his remaining soldiers gathered the dead diseased bodies, threw them over Kaffa’s walls. Kaffa then placed all the bodies into the river, took their ships and fled to Italy, but it was too late because they were already infected and carried it with them. It was mostly spread by the sailors that were on ships because the rats on the same ships had the disease. The rats were bitten by fleas, so the fleas then gained the disease and moved onto a human host after their rat host died. They would bite the human and let the disease flow into their bloodstream. The sailors then came home to their families with the disease and because of that, the sickness spread. Many of the doctors that would treat the ill, would end up coming down with the same disease by the end of the day. The Black Plague had a big impact on history because after the plague
The pandemic known to history as the Black Death was one of the world’s worst natural disasters in history. It was a critical time for many as the plague hit Europe and “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.” The plague made an unforgettable impact on the history of the West. It is believed to have originated somewhere in the steppes of central Asia in the 1330s and then spread westwards along the caravan routes. It spread over Europe like a wildfire and left a devastating mark wherever it passed. In its first few weeks in Europe, it killed between 100 and 200 people per day. Furthermore, as the weather became colder, the plague worsened, escalating the mortality rate to as high as 750 deaths per day. By the spring of 1348, the death toll may have reached 1000 a day. One of the main reasons the plague spread so quickly and had such a devastating effect on Europe was ultimately due to the lack of medical knowledge during the medieval time period.
Summary: The Black Death, by Philip Ziegler, covers the epidemic that spread throughout Eurasia around 1348. The book mostly focuses on England and how the disease affected this area. The book also covers other portions of Europe such as France, Italy, and Germany but not as in depth. Ziegler uses the research of many historians to piece together what occurred during this time of grief. Ziegler starts off the book explaining the origins and nature of the plague. He explains how the tartar attacked the port city of Genoa by catapulting diseased corpses in the city’s compound. The Genoese decided to flee and went further north, which caused the spread of
Cantor does this by bringing into play people during the period including royals and peasants, addressing the Jewish Conspiracy of the time and also speaking of those affected by the post-plague. Cantor takes the reader on a journey throughout the book first through a section stated Biomedical Context in which the origin of the disease and deaths from it are discussed, followed by a segment which regards the people involved and then the history of the tragedy and what came from
The plague of the black death was a panic and disaster in Western Europe because it leads the death of ⅓ of the population. It quickly spread all over the continent, destroying full towns and cities. Moreover, the plague reached its peak of destructions in 1349, which was a “wretched, terrible, destructive year, the remnants of the people alone remain.” Life before the black death arrived for the serfs it was unpleasant and short. Nevertheless, Europe before the black death arrived was successful and the trade at the time was strong. The spread of the plagues was traumatic and unexpected because it spread so quickly.
In the wake of the Black Plague, most of europe was an obsessively morbid culture; almost entirely rejecting life, the late 14th century birthed the start of a growing anticipation of the apocalypse, and the image of death that we are most familiar with today; a skeletal, grim reaper cloaked in black, holding a scythe.
The Great Plague was an outbreak that killed a third of population in Europe. It was a scourge that originated in the arid plains of central Asia and traveled along the Silk Road. From then on, fleas living on rats, which were typically found on merchant ships, carried it. There were three types of the plague: bubonic plague, this was an infection of the lymph glands and
During Medieval times, there was a lot of fighting people got the disease called the black death. In medieval times were the dark ages. The most important thing happens was the black death. In the dark ages, there was a lot of fights. People began hating the church, there was a big dilemma with the church, Monks, and the king.