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How Did The Black Plague Affect Society

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The black plague struck Europe from 1347 to 1351. The infected bacteria traveled through ships from China and Inner Asia to Europe then spread on land. From the devastating impact on the population, to the workings of the society, the impact of the plague was felt on all levels of the social order. The Black Death’s impact on society and the modern world is deep, and although there were many different effects, some had more importance than others. The most significant effects of the Black Death was the church’s shifting place in society, the weakening of feudalism, and the decline of manorialism due to the large effects on society.
The Black Plague affected the people’s relationship with the church and therefore changed the church’s effect on society. One way the plague affected the people in relation to the church was …show more content…

In addition they could not risk taxing the peasants more, otherwise peasants might leave for other jobs (Starr). The lord was gaining less a of a profit because they had to pay the peasants more, and could not increase the taxes imposed on the peasants to raise their income. Due to the black death, Feudalism no longer profitable anymore. During the bubonic plague lords lost land, they either sold it or it was reclaimed by a king. After the plague, lords often had significantly less land that before, partly because harvests were plentiful. Therefore, lords did not gain as much money from farming leading them to cut down on land (David Routt). The plague killed people from all socials classes, so another way lords lost land was dying. Kings often reclaimed the land that once belongs to dead lords(“Black Death: The Lasting Impact”). Lords, the backbone of feudalism, led to it decline partly because of losing property. The effects of the plague led to lords losing property and money which caused the downfall of

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