Bubonic Plague Research Paper

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During the medieval ages in Europe, an extremely devastating disease that wiped out much of Europe’s population swept through the land. The people were terrified because they did not even know its cause. This plague is most commonly known as the Black Death or Bubonic Plague. The Bubonic Plague changed many laws, left many rhymes in its wake, and was very hard to prevent because of the lack of information about its origin. To say people did not know much about the plague was an underestimation. From its origins, to its spread, to its cure, the doctors whose sole task was to treat this notorious slaughterer barely knew more than the poor people they were nursing. They did, on the other hand, recognize the point that it spread rapidly and without any difficulty. Mixtures of onion and butter, arsenic, bits of dried up frog, flower mixtures and even quite a few bloodlettings were unsuccessful in curing the victims. When they seemed closer to dying, the more …show more content…

The air was full of the dreadful smell of gruesome, lifeless and decaying bodies. Quarantines were set up on land to keep infected people out of the city. Accommodations were set up to allow trekkers to wait until the forty days were finished; nevertheless, black rats and fleas could not be kept out by these methods so disease continued to be spread (History of Black Death, The Black Death – Manifestations of the epidemic). The Plague, being as disastrous and horrifying, became the origin of many rhymes and songs later on. “A familiar nursery rhyme that children have recited as a harmless play song for generations ironically refers to one of Europe’s most devastating diseases. The bubonic plague, better known as “The Black Death” has existed for thousands of years ( David Perlin, Ph.D., and Ann Cohen, Epidemics of the Past, Bubonic Plague).” It was supposedly connected to the symptoms of the

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