Black Death
No one - peasant or aristocrat - was safe from the disease [bubonic plague], and once it was contracted, a horrible and painful death was almost a certainty. The dead and the dying lay in the streets abandoned by frightened friends and relatives (482).This certainly paints an accurate and horrifying picture of the fourteenth century during the plague. The bubonic plague, also known as the Black Death or The Plague, (Hindley 103) was one of the major scourges of the Middle Ages. It killed indiscriminately without remorse or thought of consequences. Because the plague was so widespread, theories about causes, blame and a variety of supposed cures abounded. Most of these were without basis or fact and relied on myths and rumors. Theories for the causes and blames came from ignorance and hate, two horrible things married by fear. Some of the cures were not much better than the plague itself. The plague was transmitted to humans by fleas from infected rats that nested in people's roofs (Matthew 154). Fourteenth century man had no concept of how the disease was spread or how it could be stopped. The plague was transmitted to western Europe from China along trade routes (Matthew 154). Once the plague had rea
Blum, Jerome, Cameron, Rondo, and Barnes, Thomas G. The European World A History. BostonLittle, Brown and Company, 1970. The Black Death killed about a third of Europe's population. The reign of terror lasted for twenty years in the fourteenth century (Cantor 477). This horrible disease killed young and old, rich and poor. The plague knew no boundaries. Today we might think that the beliefs of the fourteenth century were barbaric and archaic, but it has only been in the last one hundred years that scientists and doctors have discovered the cause of the bubonic plague. Believing that the plague was caused by bad air, the planets positions or the Jews or that it could be cured with fire or herbs seemed logical to fourteenth century man although it may seem foolish to modern man.
Some common words found in the essay are:
Matthews Experts, Black Death, Middle Ages, Mars March, Thousands Jews, Life Medieval, , Elizabeth Bartel, God Ziegler, According Bartel, fourteenth century, matthew 154, bubonic plague, herlihy 354, black death, plague ziegler, plague ziegler 25, barnes 38, plague transmitted, everyday life, herlihy 353, everyday life medieval, matthew 154 plague, life medieval travellers, cameron barnes 38,
Approximate Word count = 1147
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)
|