The great plague of Europe

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The Black Plague was a horrific point in the world’s history, but was it all just death and horror? The Plague was not only a terrible pandemic but a transition between the middle ages and the renaissance. It had changed not only the lives of the people in the time period of when the pandemic had started, but it had also changed the lives of many people today and the ways people live. The Plague had spread exceedingly fast throughout Europe and Asia. It also had enormous effects on the Economy, Culture and Religion.It caused widespread persecutions of minorities like Jews and lepers, and created a general morbid mood, which influenced people to live for the moment, unsure of their daily survival.
Many people think that because a majority of the deaths happen in Europe, that the plague originated from Europe. Although no one knows exactly where the plague originated from, the first records of the plague show that the plague may have started in a city in China in the 1330’s (Secrets of the dead, 2002). The Plague had eventually spread from Asia to Europe through the Silk Road and by Sea through trading ships.
The Plague had spread to Europe in various ways many from trading ships and the transportation of goods. The Plague is caused from bacteria named Yersinia pestis. Rodents such as Rats carry the disease. The bacterium is transported from the rodent to a human by their fleas. Many people had thought that the disease had spread from human to human, isolating themselves from the general population only to see themselves and their families perish from this awful disease. The fact of the matter is when the more fleas to be infected with Yersinia pestis surmounted to a greater chance of one being infected. The Government had no res...

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...ad perished. Most people in this time had very strong beliefs in their own religion and before the plague religion was one of the only things that the lower class citizens had. But after the plague many religions had suffered and been weakened. People had just stopped believing, and felt as if there really hadn’t been a god the whole time. In some cases people had started to mimic religion, not only because it had let them down but they somehow thought that this would appease the Devil and it would stop the killing. Flagellants practiced self-flogging to atone for sins. Its members went into the streets, two by two, beating each other with chains and whips. Flagellants traveled from town to town and were often looked upon as spreaders of the disease. The Black Death hit the monasteries very hard because of their close quarters and their kindness in helping the sick.

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