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The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of...

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The Black Death 1347-1350
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Page 1: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

The Black Death

1347-1350

Page 2: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

How the Plague Arrived

• Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe.

• By the fall it spread throughout the southwest of Europe.

• By 1349 it had reached England.• England was completely infected by 1350.• By the end of that year, nearly 2 ½ million

people were dead.– An estimated 1/3 of Europe's population or

25,000,000 people!

Page 3: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

Where did the Black Death come from?

Page 4: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

Symptoms of the Plague

Page 5: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

What caused the Plague?

• The Oriental Rat Flea

Page 6: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

How was the Plague Transmitted?

• Spread by fleas that lived on black rats.

• The fleas sucked the rat’s blood which was infected with the plague.

• When the rats died, the fleas moved onto humans.

Page 7: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

Forms of the Plague: Bubonic

• The bubonic plague was the most commonly seen form of the Black Death.

• The mortality rate was 30-75%. • The symptoms were enlarged and inflamed

lymph nodes (around arm pits, neck and groin).

• Victims were subject to headaches, nausea, aching joints, fever of 101-105 degrees, vomiting, and a general feeling of illness.

• Symptoms took from 1-7 days to appear.

Page 8: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

Forms of the Plague: Pneumonic

• The pneumonic plague was the second most commonly seen form of the Black Death.

• The mortality rate for the pneumonic plague was 90-95% (if treated today the mortality rate would be 5-10%).

• The pneumonic plague infected the lungs. • Symptoms included slimy sputum tinted

with blood. – Sputum is saliva mixed with mucus exerted from

the respiratory system.

• As the disease progressed, the sputum became free flowing and bright red.

• Symptoms took 1-7 days to appear.

Page 9: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

Forms of the Plague: Septicemic

• The Septicemic plague was the most rare form of all.

• The mortality was close to 100% (even today there is no treatment).

• Symptoms were a high fever and skin turning deep shades of purple.

• The black death got its name from the deep purple, almost black discoloration.

• Victims usually died the same day symptoms appeared.

• In some cities, as many as 800 people died every day.

Page 10: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.
Page 11: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

How did they cure it?

• Medieval people did not know that the germs caused the disease.

• They also did not know that it was spread by rats and fleas.

• They had a superstitions believe that their bodies must be poisoned.

Page 12: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

Crazy Cure #1

• The swelling should be softened with figs and cooked onions.

• The onions were mixed with yeast and butter.

• Then they opened the swelling with a knife.

• Did it work?

Page 13: The Black Death 1347-1350. How the Plague Arrived Estimated to be some time during the summer of 1348 in Europe. By the fall it spread throughout the.

Crazy Cure #2

• Take a live frog and put its belly on the plague sore.

• The frog would swell up and burst.

• Keep doing this until the frogs stop bursting.

• Some felt that a toad would work better then a frog.

• Did it work?


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