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The Black Death: Major Events In World History

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The Black Death The Black Death also known as the bubonic plague was considered to be one of the major events in world history. Although the plague began around 430B.C. its significance would not play a role until the fourteenth century. It would take its victims suddenly as they fell to a quick painful death.
Greece, Egypt, Persia, Rome, North Africa, Arabia, Asia and Europe all experienced the agony of the Black Death. Around the sixth century the plague went into hiding not showing its ugly face again until 1347 taking over more than one third of Europe's population within a four year period. The fourteenth century was already suffering heavily from natural disasters ranging from earthquakes to crop failures when the plague returned. At …show more content…

The sailors looked very skinny and very sick. Those who rushed to help unload ignored the rumors of the illness that was spreading rapidly in the east. Within a couple of days of the citizens of the town began to fall ill. Rats were known to travel on ships and like dogs they too have fleas. Infected rat fleas were the cause of the spread of the plague. The fleas would feed on rats as well as other infected rodents which would produce a toxic type of blood poisoning. This was a highly lethal dose. The fleas that would feed on the infected rodents would then carry the deadly bacteria to its next host, in this case humans. Those who fell ill would experience fever, vomiting, delirium, pain, giddiness, became dazed as well as dim lights became very painful to one’s eyes. They would also experience dark circles throughout the body, moan, scream and get bulging buboes which are swollen lymph glands similar to a boil. The buboes would normally form on the neck, armpit and groin areas of the body. Some would be as small as an egg while others grew in some cases as large as an apple. Sometimes the growths would harden and burst causing a massive amount of pus to drain from the body. Some victims would recover after this while others would simply get attacked with other infections. Buboes were usually a signal that death would soon follow. If there had been medical professionals and medicine the plague would not have …show more content…

It would travel person to person through the air as well as through the bite of infected fleas. Most medical historians believed that this germ was spread in many different ways but the respiratory form was what caused the deaths of most of its victims. The military then and now used the plague as a war weapon. “As a highly contagious disease with an extremely high mortality rate, if left untreated, Yersinia Pestis has been used as biological warfare for centuries. Some warfare strategies include catapulting corps over walls, dropping infected fleas from airplanes and areosaling the bacteria during the cold war. More recently the plague raised concerns as an important national security threat because of its potential use by terrorist.” (Stenseth, 2008, para 8). They would also put infected rats as well as flies into water sources. Although the plague had run its course by the early 1350’s, it has reappeared every few generations ("black death," n.d.). According to many historians’ the plague has permanent homes in Asia, Siberia, China, Iran, Libya, Arabia and East

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