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Black Death : The Black Plague

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“The illness of one's mind is much worse than the body: without employment, is a disease- the rest of the soul is a Plague, a hell itself” (Smiles, Samuel). The Black Death, also known as the Bubonic Plague, came to existence in the Fourteenth Century. It was transferred from Asia in the late 1340s and caused a mass eruption in Europe. It was a very dark time period of history, which changed the way people viewed religion, fellow citizens, and life. In the 1300s, the century of the Plague, there were many poor conditions. One example was the home itself. The houses were cold, compact, damp, and dark. It was hard for large families, and even small families, to not catch the disease. If one person was infected then it would be most likely …show more content…

Many doctors said that it was in the air, and the disease was unavoidable. There have been physicians that described the Plague like a ‘tide of death’ (Addison). Since there was an absence of doctors, there were few to survive. One however, was a Guy de Chauliac. He caught the Plague by a patient, and once he was infected, he began to journal his symptoms. While still suffering from this disease he helped others, then once healed found the medicine and remedies he found, he shared them (The Plague). The church, however, believed that the disease was from the wrath of God. Priests explained that when the people had sinned; whether it be out of greed, thieving, pride, envy, anger, or lying; God had to punish them. This lead many people to do self harm, and to ‘get rid’ of the old sinners. The effects that the Plague had on the different economies are endless. It is a series of social, religious and economic disruptions. The most devastating part was between 1347 and 1350, 30% to 65% of Europe's population was killed. It was later reduced to an estimated 350 to 450 million people. It took more than 150 years for Europe to recover. The demographic and social conditions were affected by the reduction in Europe's population because of the Plague. Another area was religion. A group, called the Flagellants, practiced a theory of self flogging or whipping

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