The Plague: The Black Death In Europe

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The Black Death is an incurable disease that spread through Europe during 1346-1352. The disease spread through villages and towns killing people within weeks and it was spreading quickly. People thought this was the going to be the end of the world. The Black Death is one of the main causes for our social and economical changes today. The Black Death ended population growth in Europe , causing over 20 million people to decease. It basically wiped out one third of Europe’s population. No one knew what caused the plague because in that time period they weren’t as advanced with technology as we are today. Many years later they discovered that the plague came from infected rats . Which the rats would contaminate the people who boarded ships that sailed throughout Europe and spread the disease. On June 1381 , a man named Wat Tyler led a group of peasants into London and ran a revolt. The were mad about the amount of tax the government were making them pay. The were also mad about the amount of work they had to do for the Church without …show more content…

The Lords started to realized that the had less control over workers and began to change what they produce. The peasants had to grow and harvest grain, so the lords began to raise sheep. Raising sheep requires less workers and the sheep attracted more customers for the meat and for woolen clothing. As the peasants income rose , people were able to buy more veggies and fruits. Some peasants moved from the estates and bought their own land. During the Black Death most people thought that Jews were the cause of the plague. The were easy to blame because many people thought that they practiced witchcraft. Europeans started to persecute the jews and the hoped that the black plague would end. Some villages formed authorities to protect them , but the Jewish people couldn’t free all the hatred and violence. Eventually the Jews fled

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