Origins of the Black Death
Kipchak Mongols besieging a Genoese trading centre on the Crimean coast catapulted their own
dead into the city. The dead had been killed by a mysterious disease and the disease spread
quickly in the besiged city. Some of the Genoese escaped by sea taking the disease with them.
They landed at Messina in Sicily spreading the disease even further. In June of 1348 the disease
landed in England in Dorset and by the winter it had reached London. The deaths were at their
peak in the summer of 1349 and it is estimated that somewhere between a quarter to half of
England's population were killed. Even when the worst was over England was not safe and
another outbreak of the disease occurred in 1361. More outbreaks of plague occurred until
the final London plague of 1665.
Bubonic Plague
The Black Death could have been what we know today as Bubonic Plague. Bubonic Plague is spread
by the rat flea. The idea for a long time has been that the rat fleas spread across Asia
and Europe on rats and people killing as they went. Initial symptoms of the bubonic plague appear
between two to six days after being bitten by an infected flea. Flu-like symptoms, headaches, chills and a fever
then begin. The plague bacteria congregate at a lymph node and multiple. The lymph node
becomes infected and very painful. These symptoms are similar to those suffered by the medieval
people who were infected by the black death.
A Virus
The modern belief is that the Black Death was in fact a virus and not the bubonic plague. In 1918
a virus known as Spanish Flu spread across Europe killing somewhere between 20 and 40 million people, far more than were
killed during the Black Death outbreak in medieval times. It seems easier to believe that a virus
can be transmitted from person to person than a disease by flea bites especially when outbreaks of flu now occur regularly in the
winter months.
Effects of the Black Death
Social class was not a barrier for the Black Death. Members of royal families and high ranking religious people also
succumbed. These included: -
| Eleanor, Queen of Aragon |
| Alfonso XI of Castile |
| Joan, daughter of Edward III of England |
| John le Stratford and Thomas Bradwardine, archbishops of Canterbury |
| 25% of the papal court at Avignon |
Reduced population
The population of Britain had been steadily increasing through the medieval period. After the
Black Death had passed somewhere between a quarter and a half of the population was dead. This
had a
Abandoned villages
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