By: Inala G
The Black Death (1347-1351)
Black Death lived within the bloodstream of rodents, and then fleas would get on them and intake their blood. Spreading the disease as the flea moved from mammal to mammal. The fleas came from China and got imported to Europe subconsciously by trade ships that would leave from one place and dock in another, not knowing that they carried a deadly virus.
The effects of the Bubonic plague had a huge impact on the Middle Ages. Everyone was getting sick and eventually dying due to the fact that no one had the resources or knowledge required to overcome the disease
Black Plague contributed to the end of the Middle Ages by the death of the gross amount of 75 to 200 million people. People dying meant trade would go down because there was no one to do the work. That goes for crops, and anything else that involved a man made action.
Black Death lived within the bloodstream of rodents, and then fleas would get on them and intake their blood. Spreading the disease as the flea moved from mammal to mammal. The fleas came from China and got imported to Europe subconsciously by trade ships that would leave from one place and dock in another, not knowing that they carried a deadly virus.
The effects of the Bubonic plague had a huge impact on the Middle Ages. Everyone was getting sick and eventually dying due to the fact that no one had the resources or knowledge required to overcome the disease
Black Plague contributed to the end of the Middle Ages by the death of the gross amount of 75 to 200 million people. People dying meant trade would go down because there was no one to do the work. That goes for crops, and anything else that involved a man made action.
To the left is a photo of the effect that the plague had on the people, and it shows how they were all sick, dying, and lacked energy.
This is an example of a flea, or a disease carrier, during the Black Plague. This hid in ships and planted themselves on animals in the