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Black Death

Black Death  
Part of the National cirriculum

Great epidemic of plague, mainly the bubonic variant, that ravaged Europe in the mid-14th century. Contemporary estimates that it killed between one-third and half of the population (about 75 million people) are probably accurate. The cause of the plague was the bacterium Yersinia pestis, transmitted by fleas that infested migrating Asian black rats. Originating in China, the disease followed the trade routes through India into Europe. The name Black Death was first used in England in the early 19th century.

The plague arrived in Sicily, Italy, in October 1347, reached southern France in January 1348, and was first recorded in England in August 1348, after two fishing boats from France docked at Weymouth, Dorset. Symptoms were violent headache; dark blotches caused by bleeding under the skin; and buboes, massively swollen lymph glands that could grow to the size of an orange in the groin or armpit. Buboes were variously described as black pustules, boils, and abscesses. Few victims lived longer than four to seven days, though there were rare cases of survival if the buboes burst. Medieval medicine was helpless, and many doctors and priests simply ran away. Doctors blamed bad air or a conjunction of the planets for the disease, others suggested that beggars or the Jews had poisoned the wells. Most agreed that the plague was a punishment from God. Ignorance of the cause made the disease even more terrifying. It was, wrote one Flemish priest, ‘the most terrible of all terrors’.

© RM 2009. Helicon Publishing is division of RM.


 
 

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