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Black Death: Natural And Human Disaster In Medieval Europe

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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

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