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The plague that caused the Black Death originated in China in the early to mid-1300s and spread along trade routes westward to the Mediterranean and northern Africa. It reached southern England in 1348 and northern Britain and Scandinavia by 1350.

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Alphonso Nicolas

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5y ago
AnswerThe Black Death was very dangerous and contagious and destroyed 2/3's of Europe's population and it killed people in a strange manner. People who weren't affected went crazy in fear of catching it and the people who caught it usually died within 7 days. In those times doctors were not very advanced and they mostly believed in superstition, so 70% of people who caught it died. It was slow and painful.

This was very dangerous as it spread all over the world and many people were at risk of catching it. The people who didn't catch it were very few and were very lucky. The Black Death was so dangerous that even kings and the people of the highest positions were in danger of catching it. Nothing could stop it and nothing could stop it spreading.

People in those times were very superstitious and believed it was a punishment from God. So flagellates stood in the streets and whipped themselves and said it was cleaning them of their sins. The Kings also believed this and sent out their men to whip the people in the streets to clean them of the sins to so the Black Death would come to a halt. Overall, the Black Death was a very painful disease once caught. It wiped out 2/3's of the Europe's population, destroyed the feudal system, killed people in a painful way and was driving the people crazy.

And it was REALLY bad, also, the song, "Ring a Round a Rosie" was named after it

AnswerThe Black Death, also known as the Bubonic Plague, was a pandemic that swept through Europe between 1346 and sporadically until the late 1700's; peaking between 1347-1351. As it ravaged Europe the Black Death killed anywhere from 25-50 million Europeans and severely damaged Europe socially and economically. The drop in population also had the effect of reducing the available supply of labour; increasing wages and decreasing the ability to impose feudalism and serfdom on peasants.

The plague was transmitted by infected fleas carried by the very common Black Rat. The flea would bite the infected rat, and the deadly bacteria would grow in its system. When the flea bit a human, the flea's saliva and the bacteria would enter the bloodstream. Or, in the case of the Pneumonic form of the plague, drops of bacteria-infected saliva were inhaled.

In Medieval Europe, sanitation was virtually nonexistent, cities were crowded and filthy, and hunger was prevalent-the perfect environment for disease to spread. With no idea what the cause of the plague was, people turned to religious beliefs, and sometimes folk superstition. Many believed that the Black Death was God's judgment on Europe's sin.

The plague manifested itself in three basic forms, with varying degrees of fatality. The most common was the swelling of the lymph nodes (tissue around the throat, armpits, and groin). The skin around the site of the swelling would first redden and then darken, and the victim would suffer nausea and very high fever. 30-80% of victims died, most of which within a week.

The second most common manifestation of the plague was the Pneumonic form, which attacked the lungs. People hit by this would cough up blood with phlegm, which would eventually thin to liquid consistency and become bright red. High fever also accompanied this. The mortality rate was extremely high: 90-95%.

The third and rarest form was the septicemic plague, which was also the most deadly at almost 100% mortality rate. In its worst form, the skin would swell and blacken due to blood clots blocking veins and arteries. Victims often died the same day symptoms appeared.

It was 229 years after the Great Plague dealt London such a terrible blow that the probable cause of the disease was discovered. In 1894, during an epidemic in Hong Kong, two rival research teams - one led by the Japanese scientist Shibasaburo Kitasato and the other by the Frenchman Alexandre Yersin, a former pupil of Louis Pasteur - isolated the bacillus Pasteurella pestis (now called Yersinia pestis) that is responsible for plague.

Further research showed that this was a disease of black rats and other rodents, spread by their fleas. When all the rats died, the fleas would frantically look for new hosts: human beings. The plague bacillus is extremely virulent. Laboratory mice die after being infected with just three bacilli - and fleas can disgorge up to 24,000 in one bite.

See related link for more information on the Black Death.
The Black Death occured in 1347 AD. The Black death is another name for the plague. It got this name because of the characteristic Black spots and/or "Buboes" that appeared on the body on the armpit after infection (buboes only appeared if the person had Bubonic plague, one of the three forms).

The Black Death was very dangerous and catchy and destroyed 2/3's of the world's population and it killed people in a wild way and people who weren't affected went crazy in fear of catching it and the people who caught it usually died within 5 days after you caught it. In those times doctors were not very advanced and they mostly believed in superstition, so people who caught it 70% of them died. It was a slow but very painful way of dying.

This was very dangerous as it spread all over the world and many people were at risk of catching it. The people who didn't catch it were very few and were very lucky. The Black Death was so dangerous that even kings and the people of the highest positions were in danger of catching it. Nothing could stop it and nothing could perevnt it from spreading.

People in those times were very superstitious and believed it was a punishment from God. So flagellants stood in the streets and whipped themselves and said it was cleansing them from their sins. The Kings also believed this and sent out there men to whip the people in the streets to clean them of the sins so the Black Death would come to a halt.

It is caused by bacteria carried by fleas from mice or rats; when they bite you they insert the disease into your system or bloodstream and it will kill you in no more than five days or if your lucky you may survive (only if your buboe pops naturally)/

Overall, the Black Death was a very painful disease once caught. It wiped out 2/3's of the world's population, destroyed the feudal system, killed people in a painful way and was driving the people crazy. It lasted for a long period of 4 years. It began in 1347 and lasted until 1351in that period it wiped out 2/3's of the worlds population.

For more information on the five stages of the black death then search it above on the ask a question box.
The Black Death was one of the deadliest pandemics in human history, peaking in Europe between 1348 and 1350. It is widely thought to have been an outbreak of bubonic plague caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, but this view has recently been challenged. Usually thought to have started in Central Asia, it had reached the Crimea by 1346. From there, probably carried by fleas residing on the black rats that were regular passengers on merchant ships, it spread throughout the Mediterranean and Europe.

The Black Death is estimated to have killed 30% to 60% of Europe's population, reducing the world's population from an estimated 450 million to between 350 and 375 million in 1400. This has been seen as creating a series of religious, social and economic upheavals which had profound effects on the course of European history. It took 150 years for Europe's population to recover. The plague returned at various times, resulting in a larger number of deaths, until it left Europe in the 19th century.

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12y ago

"Black Death" refers to the color one's skin turned while dying from the Bubonic Plague.

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According to the article linked below, the term "black" was not used to describe the color of the skin, but was used in the sense of "dreadful."

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13y ago

The Black Death was one of the worst natural disasters in history. In 1347 A.D., a great plague swept over Europe, ravaged cities causing widespread hysteria and death. One third of the population of Europe died. "The impact upon the future of England was greater than upon any other European country." (Cartwright, 1991) The primary culprits in transmitting this disease were oriental rat fleas carried on the back of black rats.

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13y ago

it come from rats but the fles

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According to Wikipedia:

"The Black Death was one of the deadliest pandemics in human history, peaking in Europe between 1348 and 1350. It is widely thought to have been an outbreak of bubonic plague caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis,..."

You can read more, below.

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5y ago

The black death now called by doctors the bubonic plague, was caused by bacteria carried by fleas that would come off rats from foreign trade ships. When the flea bit a person the person would become infected. And infected people could also transmit the disease to other people who came near them.

The infected person would get a lump on them then many. After that the bumps would turn black or in more worse cases black and red, and then five days after the first lump the person died. The "black death" or bubonic plague caused a major decrease in the population in medieval Europe. There was nothing the doctors could do!
black death was where ppl died it was a disease that was given to rats by fleas the rats borded trading ships and was then transmitted to humans the disease causED open wound deals and infection with major dehydration. extremely contagious. no other disease killed as many people (bubonic plague)

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12y ago

The Black Death, also called the Black Plague, is a disease known as bubonic plague. There have been two major outbreaks in European history. The first was the Plague of Justinian, which first hit the Byzantine Empire in the year 541. The greatest area of affect was in the Byzantine Empire and the cities of the Mediterranean, but the spread was recorded in areas as far away as Britian. Up to a quarter of the population of the Eastern Mediterranean died, and localized resurgences occurred up to the year 750. The plague ended any chance of the Eastern Empire reestablishing a pan-Mediterranean Empire similar to the pre-divided Roman Empire, and contributed significantly to the decline of Western Europe.

Plague came to Europe again in 1347, initially through ships from the Eastern Mediterranean, and over the next 10-12 years spread through virtually every part of Europe. Mortality rates were high, with estimates that anywhere from 30 to 60 percent of the population died. As with the earlier plague of Justinian, localized outbreaks continued for centuries. This particular outbreak has been called the worst pandemic in human history. In addition to Europe much of the Middle East and Parts of North Africa were affected as well.

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14y ago

to have the black death would be horrible and painful. you would have to suffer with one of the most horrible experiences imaginable.

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8y ago

black death was Plague pandemic. It caused bloody vomit fever and tumors. And death!

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Anonymous

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4y ago

A dieses

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