Have you ever thought about how our ancestors survived through all of the diseases from hundreds of years ago? Well hundreds of years ago in the Medieval ages, our ancestors from Europe had to survive a deadly plague called the Black Death. have you ever thought how our ancestors were affected by that disease? Our ancestors had to live through the Black Death and were affected by the Black Death emotionally, physically, and economically. So many people had to live through the Black Death and were hurt emotionally that they had to lose their family and friends all because of the Black Death. a lot of people thought that the Black Death was a punishment from God and the angels. people thought they were being punished for their sins. Seracambi who was an apothecary drew a drawing that showed the Angels shooting arrows at people to kill them. this is what people thought was happening in the medieval ages. Seracambi drew many deaths of the Black Death. when he made records of these deaths, he started to draw images of what was happening in the Black Death. he's are donating the images or drawings to the local Lord as a reference. In one of his drawings for the source, he drew the Angels coming out of the clouds looking very angry at the humans shooting arrows at them and pouring some sort of powder onto the humans. Now because of these deaths, people were hurt emotionally to see their loved ones and their friends just die in front of them. these pictures Seracambi drew,
Life was very busy for me in 1300’s, I travelled through many countries and continents following the trail of dead bodies. I am death. I have lived forever. I will live until no human lives no more. I will continue collecting the souls of the deceased on earth and taking them to rest in the light blue place beyond. I lived through the Black Death watching on as the world experienced the disastrous effects.
The Black Death discusses the causes and results of the plague that devastated medieval Europe. It focuses on the many effects it had on the culture of medieval Europe and the possibility that it expedited cultural change. I found that Robert S. Gottfried had two main theses in the book. He argued that rodent and insect life cycles, as well as the changing of weather systems affect plague. He claimed that the devastation plague causes is partly due to its perpetual recurrences. Plague ravaged Europe in cycles, devastated the people when they were recuperating. As can be later discovered in the book, the cycles of plague consumed the European population. A second thesis, which he described in greater detail,
(n.d.). Deutsches Medizinhistorisches Museum | Aktuell | Objektgeschichten | April 2011: Pestarztmaske. Retrieved December 11, 2016, from http://www.dmm-ingolstadt.de/index.php?id=85 1): I know this is an academic source because it is the official page of the museum of medicine located on Germany, one of the many countries that was part of the Frank empire2): This Article made by Prof. Dr. Marion Ruisinger tells us that these masks were first used in the 14th century when the Black Death started. Doctors and surgeons used this mask to treat patients with the plague because it was thought that the foul air caused the disease so they filled the beak with sponged filled with essences and fragrances, Also the opening of the eyes was covered with
The Black Death, also known as the Black Plague, was a rapid infectious outbreak that swept over Europe and Asia in the mid-1300s resulting in the death of millions of people. Tentatively, this disease started in the Eastern parts of Asia, and it eventually made its way over to Europe by way of trade routes. Fever and “dark despair” characterized this plague. The highly contagious sickness displayed many flu-like symptoms, and the victim’s lymph nodes would quickly become infected. The contamination resulted in a colossal and rapid spread of the disease within one person’s body. Due to the lack of medical knowledge and physicians, there was little that people could do to save those dying all around them. Now that a better understanding of
The Black Death wasn’t some minor disease, but a disease so deadly and widespread at the time, that it greatly impacted Europe’s population, economy, and political structure. Carried by fleas and infected rats, the plague entered Europe through trading. According to C. Warren Hollister, “none can have emerged from the ordeal unaffected…” This portrays the severity of the plague, and how even if your life was spared by the “hands” of the Black Death, your life was changed in some way. Many people died in their homes, in hope of surviving the plague. Although many perished, those who survived were exposed to many opportunities. According to
The Black Death was a monumental epidemic that took millions of lives and spread its devastation throughout Europe and Afro-Eurasia countries. The Black Death is well-known in Europe for the record amount of people that suffered and died from the disease. This devastating event began in the 1330s and didn’t end up dying out until the mid-1350s. It was an infectious disease that affected a large part of Afro-Eurasia in the mid-fourteenth century with millions of people dying from the Black Death. This brought about a great change in many ways from culture to the general way of life in Europe, Asia, and Africa. Populations were left in shambles in countries that had been affected such as England, Italy, Spain, and France just to name a few. “The
In 1347 the people of Medieval Europe lived very differently from how we live today. Many houses were not as clean or big, poorer people’s clothes were dirty and not warm enough and their health was very poor. These factors lead to the outbreak of the Black Death; a disease that spread across countries and affected many different cultures. Let’s look a little further into how this all began.
The plague, otherwise known as “the Black Death”, brought on much turmoil and suffering for the habitants of Pistoia. Numerous ordinances were put into effect with the primary goal of limiting the spread of the plague as well as to keep the city as healthy as possible. These ordinances typically focused on confinement, i.e. no one goes to Pisa and Luca and no one from Pisa and Luca is allowed to enter Pistoia (ordinance 1), how death and burials are to be processed (ordinances 3-12), and how butchers were to handle their animals and animal carcasses (ordinances 13-19). Essentially, confinement was targeted in hopes of stopping the spread of the infection while keeping the city isolated. Secondly, how the bodies of plague victims and their
The Black Death was one of the most life-changing pandemics in history. It was first discovered 550 years later in the 1800s by Alexandre Yersin, a french biologist. In his honor, the plague was named Yersinia Pestis. The plague traveled in two major ways. Yersin discovered that it traveled by infected fleas; the flea would attempt to feed on a human or animal and would then regurgitate the disease into the new host, further spreading the illness. Urban areas across Europe were populous with rats, which were one of the main hosts of the plague. These rodents spread the Black Death throughout cities in days. The unaffected still were not safe if they did not come in contact with an infected flea or rat. The plague also traveled pneumonically, or through the air. It caused large boils full of blood and pus, which would pop and spread. Another symptom was coughing, which was one of the many ways of proliferation. The disease eventually spread throughout Europe and killed a third of it’s population. It’s wrath caused many shortages, loss in hope, riots, and even some good things, such as many changes in art, science, and education. Therefore, the Black Death was one of the most life-changing pandemics in history.
The black death arrived in Europe in October of 1347. It was brought by twelve Genoese trading ships that docked at the Sicilian port of Messina after a lengthy expedition through the Black Sea. The people that were gathered on the docks to meet the twelve ships were greeted with a terrifying surprise: the majority of the sailors that were on they ship were dead, and the ones that were still alive were somberly ill. They had fevers, were unable to hold down food, and were delirious from pain. They were covered with big black boils that oozed pus and blood. The illness was named the “Black Death” because of the black boils.
Reece Eggert Mrs. Wilkeson English 12 1 March 2024 Macbeth Argument Many people find themselves with a strong sense of guilt while seeking their own personal power. Such is established within William Shakespeare’s 1606 tragedy, Macbeth. In the play, Macbeth attempts to control the future by actively seeking out and acting upon the prophecies of the witches and to bury the past by committing further atrocities to hide his guilt, illustrating the idea that the perilous pursuit of power can lead to the inescapable burden of guilt. Macbeth attempts to control the future by actively pursuing the prophecies foretold by the witches in the belief that they hold the key to securing his position as king. Initially, he is consumed by ambition, willing
by Yersinia pestis. Several species of rodents host this bacterium, usually contracted from flea bites. There
Have you ever had a teacher that you just couldn’t seem to get along with no matter how hard you try? No doubt you have if you have finished school or are in school now. Just like we have or had to deal with this sort of situation, so does Scout. In chapter two of, “To Kill A Mockingbird,” Scout is attending school for the first time and it is not going well. Scout first learns that she will have to act differently than she does at home with regards to Jem. Then her teacher, Miss Caroline, learns that Scout can read and blames Scout’s father for teaching her wrong. Later, Miss Caroline asks all the students to take out their lunches and offers to lend money to William Cunningham since he doesn’t have a lunch or the money to pay for one. This
There is no doubt that in the majority of films directed by the renowned Alfred Hitchcock, women play a significant role. Many of Hitchcock’s films feature a blonde, rather than brunette, as the female lead because Hitchcock considered blondes “a symbol of the heroine” and “less suspicious than a brunette”. Hitchcock’s heroines are externally immaculate, but full of deceit and weakness. They have mother-like tendencies and are often portrayed as proper and obedient towards their male counterparts, as most women were expected to be in Hitchcock’s era. It is safe to presume that Hitchcock had severe mummy issues, which many of his films make apparent by severely punishing even the slightest of deceptions. The central dynamic in the majority of
In the year 1348 the world changed forever. The Black Death, which is another name for the Bubonic Plague, laid havoc on the entire world. “The plague chases the screaming without pity and does not accept a treasure for a ransom. Its engine is far-reaching. The plague enters into the house and swears it will not leave except with all of its inhabitants…” (Al-Wardi, #29, 113). The plague did not care if the people were rich, poor, white, black, Muslim or Catholic, it would kill whomever it could. The plague brought out the worst in people because people acted selfishly, people were completely inhumane, and there was no peace.