The classical "Black Death" first struck Europe in 1348-53, though plague had afflicted at least Mediterranean Europe inn 541-43 and 590-91, and may have recurred in the 7th century. Plague returned repeatedly until the 17th-18th centuries, with the last great epidemic in England in 1665, in France in 1720 and in Russia in 1771. A last pandemic spread through southern China in 1894 and then to India and around the world, though deaths this time were far fewer, at least outside Asia.
It took 4 year until the Black Death was over. Almost 10 million people died from that diesease
The Great Plague of London began in 1665 and lasted until 1666. It was responsible for the deaths of approximately 100,000 people, which was roughly 15 percent of the city's population.
From 1348 to the late 1350s, but the disease is still in existence. However, we have vaccinations for it today, and most people are immune to it. It is very rare.
it took about a century
ANS2: Check it out, Europe is still here. The plague might have once wiped out a quarter of the european population but, it didn't wipe out all of Europe.
50 years
The black plague
The black death is also known as 'The Black Plague' but the scientific name for it is the bubonic plague.
The black death, or bubonic plague, was caused by a bacteria, thought to be Yersinia pestis.
In 1665 there wasn't the black death. The last large plague outbreak was in the 1330. There was an outbreak in China in 1855 caused by rats and fleas. ___ There was a major plague in 1665 that swept through England. London was especially hard hit. It was started the same way the earlier plague outbreaks began - fleas from rats.
Black Death Plague was pandemic during 1346 to 1353. It killed 75 to 200 million people.
One of the last outbreaks of the plague in England was the Great Plague of London in 1665-66.
Another name for the plague is the black death
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Black plague
the black plague
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Overture, Black Plague, and then Requiem
The Black Plague is a infectious disease.
Some parts of Ireland and Scotland. They were the last affected with Black Death.
The last outbreak of the bubonic plague (Black Death) in England was in 1665. The last widespread worldwide outbreak of bubonic plague lasted from 1855 to 1959. The bubonic plague infects a few people just about every year, but is fairly easily controlled with commonly available modern medicines.
The black plague peaked in Europe in 1348 to 1350. The black death killed 30-60% of Europes population.
That fateful year saw the world's population enduring what is believed to be a recurrence of the bubonic plague, also known as the Black Death or the Black Plague. It is further widely believed that the Black Death was responsible for the deaths of 38,000 Londoners that year.