Most people have heard of the “Black Death,” or the “Great Plague” but only because it was an epidemic. Taking a closer look at the Great Plague enables focusing on the factors that helped it spread not just the aftermath. It is important to have basic knowledge and understanding of the plague in order to be able to focus in on the factors involved in allowing it to prevail. It is believed that migration and trade had a substantial amount of influence on the prevalence and the spreading of the plague. The prevalence also allowed for a dramatic change within the European countries socially and economically. The Great Plague had a greater affect than the statistics it left behind but one must take a closer look to see how influential it truly …show more content…
It was caused by a bacteria called Yersinia Pestis. It was believed that these bacteria may have spread through fleas or rats that travelled along the trade routes in ships. There has been three recorded major outbreaks of the plague in which it did great damage to the populations each time. Symptoms of the plague varied but the most consistent was buboes, large bumps, in the groin, neck, and armpit. These bumps were filled with pus and blood and often signaled to an individual that death was on the way (“Black Death”).
There were potentially many ways that the bacteria could have been spread. It is most often thought to have traveled through rodents and fleas. It may have also traveled along the
Sild Road with armies and traders that made their ways through China. There were even recorded cases of armies tossing infected corpse into other cities in order to spreads the disease.
Springs
These people then fled on ships to Italy and the disease continued to spread from there. The exact cause is still a controversial thought but it is evident that the plagues severity was most affected by war, famine, and weather conditions The outbreak seemed to have started in