It is 1348 and you are 9, and your family suddenly gets buboes on there neck, and legs. What will you do? What will happen to your family? Well I am here to answer those questions. The plague was a nasty disease. Your family would not live without treatment for the plague…
There are three different types of plague. Here are the three plague’s are Bubonic Plague, Pneumonic Plague, and Septimic Plague. The bubonic plague is where you will get swellings on the back of your neck and it gave you very bad aching pain. The pneumonic plague would attack the respiratory system, and you would suffer, and then die. The septimic plague would attack the blood stream and would go to the heart and then you would die.
How ever do you wonder how the plagues spread. The bubonic plague was spread by flies, rats, and cargo on ships. The pneumonic plague is spread by people sneezing and breathing on other people. The septimic plague was also spread by people coughing and sneezing. Do you know what caused the plague? The plague was caused by a yersinia pestis which is a pesticide that goes in your body and starts to kill you. The plague started in lake Issyk-Kul. The
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Over time the peasants all so would not take a bath because they thought the water would spread it even more, but it ended up doing anything. Peasants would put a freshly plucked chicken under their arm so the chicken would draw the pus out of the buboes the chicken helped a little but it did not remove all of it, so the people still died. The peasants tried to ring the church bells to clean the air so the people would not get the plague, that did help a little, but it was not good enough. People would go and chase down the dogs, and cats, and they would kill them because they believed that they carried the plague. That did not work it made it worse because the cats weren’t there to kill the
The black death was caused by bacterial strains, lived in the stomach of certain fleas which live in the fur of rodents. There were three types of the plague bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic. The most common was bubonic. The person would develop bumps filled with pus this
Have you ever heard of the black death plague? If you do know, then you know how sad this time period was. If you don’t know I will tell you about it. It was devastating thousands of people lost their lives. Effectively if you don't know about the black plague, or just brushing up on it, we will be taking a deep look into this disease that took thousands of lives. We will be talking about what the black plague was, the effects of it and lastly how it ended. Let's get to it!
The victims of this plague suffered from delusions, nightmares, fevers and swellings in the groin, armpits and behind their ears. Some of the sufferers went into comas while others reported being highly delusional. At the time period this was going on there wasn't any medicine that they have tried to cure this plague. This plague ended up being contained in 750 CE it took 208 years for this plague to pass because they couldn't find a cure for it because they didn't have a strong medical field this plague spread exponentially. They couldn't find a way to actually cure this disease because it was combined with the Black Death so they were killing all their skilled doctors before they could even begin to start on a cure for this disease. One historian by the name of Procopius has reported that 10,000 people per day have been
I was observing the spread of the plague right before my eyes. I knew how the three types of plague were transmitted but the humans did not. The three types were the Bubonic, Pneumonic and Septicemic plague. The Bubonic plague was the most common plague in medieval Europe. It was transmitted by infected fleas that were carried by rats, when the rat died the flea would jump to a human to feed from their blood. The human bitten by the flea, was then infected and faced certain death, the flea would then find a new human to feed off. The Pneumonic plague, being the second most common type in medieval Europe, was far more deadly and contagious than the Bubonic plague. The Plague would attack a human's respiratory system and was spread through the air by a victim's cough. The last type of plague was the Septicemic, it was the rarest and deadliest form of the Black Death. The Septicemic plague was also spread by fleas, like the Bubonic plague, but moved directly to a human's
The plague was spread by fleas, which were not effected by the disease. Fleas first infected the rats, which lived off garbage and sewage. The rats then spread the infection to the humans. Rats were a common sight in the cities, due to the poor sanitary conditions, so no one
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.
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.
Beginning in the mid-fourteenth century, a plague swept the world like no other. It struck in a series of waves that continued into the eighteenth century. The first wave was estimated to have killed twenty-five million people, about a third of the Western Europe population at that time. Throughout the different outbreaks, the plague, also known as the Bubonic Plague or the Black Death, caused people to react in several ways. Some people believed the plague was a medical problem that can be treated, some found themselves concerned only with their own greed, still others believed there was nothing they could do and reacted in fear, and most people believed it was a form of divine
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.
This second form of the disease is called septicemic plague. Fever, chills, headache, malaise, massive hemorrhaging, and death characterize septicemic plague. The bacterium moves through the bloodstream to the alveolar spaces of the lungs, leading to a suppurating pneumonia or pneumonic plague. “Pneumonic plague is rapidly fatal and is the only type that can be spread from person to person (by droplet spray) without intermediary transmission by flea.” Pneumonic plague is characterized by watery and sometimes bloody mucus containing live bacteria. Coughing and spitting produce airborne droplets full with the highly infectious bacteria, and by inhalation others may become infected. With pneumonic plague death can occur within 24 hours of
Scientists and historians are still unsure about the origins of the bubonic plague. Medieval European writers believed that it began in China, which they considered to be a land of almost magical happenings. Chroniclers wrote that it began with earthquakes, fire falling from the sky, and
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
It was believed in the middle ages that this disease was caused by poor hygiene, bad eating habits, corrupted humid air, and a lack of rest. Once a person was thought to be infected the doctors would move them to a non-infected area thinking that this would heal the persons illness instead this transported the disease even further than normal. In modern times we have made leaps and bounds to control this illness. One of the main problems of the plague is that it is not treatable until the victim gets tested and confirmed that the plague is the illness. Once that is done they will start receiving high doxycycline doses and many other types of antibiotics. The mortality rate for someone that is not treated is 50-90% compared to treated cases of 1-15%.
What they didn't know is that plague is a disease caused by bacteria. The bacterium that causes this disease is called Yersinia Pestis. This pathogen is destructive in both humans and animals. The plague comes in three forms, bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic. Bubonic plague is an infection of the lymph nodes, pneumonic plague is an infection of the lungs and septicemic plague is an infection of the
Everyone thought God made the Black Plague as a punishment. When people found out that there was no cure for this horrible sickness they turned their faith in God and stopped going to church. People were petrified and stunned that about 30% of their population wiped out in just a couple months of the Black Plague. If people were sick everyone would stay away from them like, family, doctors, and priests. They would turn their back on anyone that was in need. There was three types of plague, the Bubonic plague, Septicemic Plague, and Pneumonic Plague. The Bubonic plague was the most common form of the disease, referring to painful swollen nodes that would appear around the armpit or neck. The Septicemic Plague is when the bacteria enter the bloodstream directly and multiplies there. Lastly the Pneumonic Plague is when the bacteria spread to the