the black death

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The Black Death

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The Black Death. The Bubonic Plague. Ravaged through Europe between 1347-1352. Wiped out nearly 1/3 of Europe’s total population! Where did it start? How did it begin? What exactly was the disease? Were there any treatments?. The Orient Rat Flea. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Black Death

The Black Death

Page 2: The Black Death

The Bubonic Plague

• Ravaged through Europe between 1347-1352.

• Wiped out nearly 1/3 of Europe’s total population!

• Where did it start? How did it begin? What exactly was the disease? Were there any treatments?

Page 3: The Black Death

The Orient Rat Flea• After the Crusades, Europe’s

trade empire grew to include the Middle East, India, and China.

• The Rat Fleas were transported by boats to Europe.

Page 4: The Black Death
Page 5: The Black Death

Transmission

Page 6: The Black Death

Symptoms

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

2. Headaches, nausea, aching joints, fever of 101-105 degrees, vomiting

3. Skins turns black and purple due to blood vessel and blood cell damage.

Page 7: The Black Death

Girl With a Bubo

Page 8: The Black Death

Need a Hand?

Page 9: The Black Death

Variations of the Black

Death

Page 10: The Black Death

Treatments?

• Burn incense to counter the smell of death.

• Quarantine the afflicted.

• Burn fires around one’s self.

Page 11: The Black Death

The Role of the Church• People wanted answers, but the

priests and bishops didn't have any. The clergy abandoned their Christian duties and fled. People prayed to God and begged for forgiveness. After the plague, ended angry and frustrated villagers started to revolt against the church.

Page 12: The Black Death

“An Account of the Plague”•  "How many valiant men, how many fair ladies,

breakfast with their kinfolk and the same night supped with their ancestors in the next world! The condition of the people was pitiable to behold. They sickened by the thousands daily, and died unattended and without help. Many died in the open street, others dying in their houses, made it known by the stench of their rotting bodies. Consecrated churchyards did not suffice for the burial of the vast multitude of bodies, which were heaped by the hundreds in vast trenches, like goods in a ships hold and covered with a little earth."

• -Giovanni Boccaccio

Page 13: The Black Death

Giovanni Boccaccio• Wrote Decameron in 1353.• Some sought more temperate life, others

engaged in sexual promiscuity, others fled the countries or lived in solitude.

Page 14: The Black Death

The Flagellants

Page 15: The Black Death

• They would walk from town to town whipping their own backs; feeling that they must suffer to achieve forgiveness from God. Only then will they be saved. (Or so they believed.)

Page 16: The Black Death

Scapegoats

• Jews were blamed for the Black Death.

• Pogroms led by the Flagellants occurred.

Page 17: The Black Death

Social, Economic Consequences

• Wages for farmed laborers increased.• Skilled artisans needed.• Agricultural prices fell.• Noble landowners lost power.

Page 18: The Black Death

Statute of Laborers in England

• Limited wages to pre-plague conditions.

• Peasants revolted.

Page 19: The Black Death

French Response• Increased the

taille- a direct tax on the peasantry.

• The Jacquerie- a French peasant uprising occurred.

Page 20: The Black Death

A Mystery Still Today…• The Black Death

mysteriously vanished around 1352.

• The final toll was 1/3 of Europe’s population was dead, financial ruin for many regions, and unaccounted for misery that would last for decades.