The Bubonic Plague During The Fourteenth Century

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During the 14th century, Europe was going through a major change. With the rise of the agricultural revolution, food became much more plentiful than ever before. Their land was being cultivated and their quality of life was much better than it had been centuries before. They did experience hardships from the famine and the Hundred Years War, however Europe was experiencing a time of growth nonetheless. When the Black Plague emerged in 1347, Europe's time of peace and growth came to an abrupt halt. Killing approximately one third of the total population of Europe and creating disarray all over the country, the Bubonic Plague (also known as the Black Death) had sever long term and lasting effects on their economy, religious and their social

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