The Plague's Place in History
"The pestilence deeply affected individual and family behavior and consciousness. It put severe strains on the social, political and economic systems...Nothing like this had happened before or since in the recorded history of mankind and the men and women of the fourteenth century would never be the same" (Norman F. Cantor). General scientific opinion is that, among other very deadly diseases like H.I.V. and the West Nile virus, the bubonic plague came to the world from the southern region of Africa and swept up through the Nile Valley in to Europe and the rest of the world. Though it had occurred numerous times before and would occur numerous times later, the most significant attack of the bubonic plague on the world would be in 1348 and 1349. In these times it would come to be known as "The Black Death," "The Pestilence," and quite simply "The Plague." During these years it devastated the Western world especially England. Many believe that in fact that the Black Death ushered out the old world and allowed for the new world that we see today to be born. Though the plague was in fact a harsh blow t
During the plague and the years following it those peasants who didn't die, and had managed their assets well, often became relatively wealthy and grew plump from larger meals. The A-bomb's development and testing, when compared to the plague, it's no big whoop. The only thing that the plague could be compared to today would be nuclear war. Cantor, as horrible and miserable as it was, it was nothing compared to the plague. There is an old saying that "God never shuts a door without opening a window. But she was killed by the plague in Bordeaux, taking away an important diplomatic and influential opportunity for Plantagenets who may have someday dominated all of Europe with their influence. With that to ponder I will leave you with one final thought. " In the case of the plague, God slammed the door on what we now think of as the dark ages and opened the window in hopes that we might someday arrive at a better tomorrow. The book In the Wake of the Plague by Norman F. One of the members of this family, fifteen-year-old Princess Joan was set to marry the heir to the throne of Castille, and thusly further the Plantagenets' influence. As the plague killed more and more people, there were fewer people available to do anything. That was the tremendous impact that it had on the world. As the quote at the top of my paper said ".
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