Bubonic plague

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    The Effects of Black Death Black death was a bubonic plague, which took the lives of millions of people in the mid 1300s. This plague was caused by a bacterium called Yersinia pestis, which lived in fleas. Therefore, transmitting the bacteria to its rodent hosts every time they would feed. The bacteria then killed the rodents leaving the fleas without hosts to feed on and in result they would feed on the humans. (Bailey 7-12) Most people who were infected would last two to three days before they

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    The Bubonic Plague, known more commonly as the Black Death, was a fatal disease that ravaged Asia and Europe during the mid-14th century. Although the destruction the Plague brought upon Europe in terms of deaths was enormous, the Islamic world arguably suffered more due to the fact that plague epidemics continually returned to the Islamic world up until the 19th century. The recurrence of the disease caused Muslim populations to never recover from the losses suffered and a resulting demographic

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    disease is most easily treated is blood letting. Looks like all those crazy blood-letting, leech-sticking doctors weren't mistreating everyone. What is the author's argument for why this disease stuck around? To really simplify things: during the black plague in Europe, people with more iron in their system were more likely

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    Destabilizing existing land-labor relations throughout the feudal system, the bubonic plague “wiped out at least one-third of the population” as it swept across Europe. By dramatically reducing the population, the plague effectively empowered laborers who were now in shorter supply within the economy. Rents in major European countries such as England, Italy, and Germany dropped by roughly 40% a century after the plague decimated the population. Similarly, wages for European laborers increased by

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    The Columbian Exchange was the transfer of items from the Old World, Europe and Africa, to the New World, North and South America. Italian explorer named Christopher Columbus discovered this new world in 1492. He found the new world while he was searching for a new trade route to Asia. Despite the title of “Exchange”, this was not an exclusively positive transfer between Europe and the New World. This exchange plants, animals, technology, and diseases, permanently altered both worlds positively and

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    It has traditionally been thought to have been a mixture of bubonic, septicaemic, and pneumonic plague. It’s lethal and vast spread was ushered in and implicated by rats and fleas. After an animal has been contaminated with the disease and entered its bloodstream, a flea would come along and feed off of the tainted host. The disease

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    One of the most important effects of long-distance travel in the era 1200 to 1500 was the famine that started in 1315. The population lessened due to the lack of food and even when they did have food it wasn’t enough to stop their starvation. In the article Famine of 1315 it was stated: “Four pennies worth of coarse bread was not enough to feed a common man for one day. The usual kinds of meat, suitable for eating, were too scarce; horse meat was precious; plump dogs were stolen. And, according

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    The Great Plague was one of the most destructive diseases ever in the history of mankind. This Plague spread through China and eventually made its way to Europe and killed around 50 million people. During this time the Great Plague dominated and brought the worst out of people. This pestilence started in Europe during the 14th century. Around this time period the population was growing rapidly and the food supply was scarce due the severe weather. Winters were especially cold and very dry because

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    From 1347 to about 1352, the Black Death ravaged Europe and its inhabitants. While this devastating plague caused an exorbitant loss of life and a great deal of emotional suffering, it did lead to some major social changes in Europe that changed the course of history. The Black Death transformed the consciousness of the surviving populous of medieval Europe in a way no other event that has occurred before or since could. This transformed psyche created the catalyst that expedited the transformation

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    Medicine in the Medieval Period In the 14th Century, trade around Europe was increasing ships regularly and travelled from the Mediterranean to other parts of Europe. In 1348 one ship brought a devastating plague to England. Source 1-Written by a monk from Malmesbury in Wiltshire, in the 1350's: "In 1348, at about the feast of the Translation of St Thomas the Martyr (7 July) the cruel pestilence, hateful to all future ages, arrived from the countries across

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