Thats a good question seeing how plagues don't just end. Many claim that it just went away, but some claim that the moors actually brought in cures and medicines along with their trade. Im not sure but it makes more sense than the ladder.
Yes, they were.
Moors are the member of northwest Africa
Moors, who were people from North Africa, both Black African and Muslim.
Other black moors.
The people today called "Moors" were Arabs originally from the marshy regions of Iraq and Iran. They conquered the Middle East and all of north Africa, including Morocco (from which the Moors got their name). So they were (and are) neither black nor white, but have olive-coloured or deeply tanned skin. They intermixed with the original Berber people of Morocco, who had similar tan-colour skin (being closely related to the ancient Egyptians).The Moors took many black African slaves, some of whom were given freedom and rose to prominent positions in Moorish Arabic society - but these formed only a small minority. It is likely that many black African troops also served in the Moorish armies, as a kind of slave labour corps.See link below for images of a typical Moors:
Well after the African Moors made slaves of the Europeans.
Moors were converted to Islam by the Arabs and this religion spread very quickly and heavily impacted the Moorish people. Muslim Moors in Spain (Mudejares) were forced to have their new born children baptized.
Yes, they did.
NO! Black Moors are goldfish they should be fed goldfish food.
No
Not particularly. Black Moors are Goldfish. They are not schooling fish. Each goldfish needs at least 10 gallons of water so if you want to keep a few of them you will need a large tank.
The term "Moors" historically referred to Muslim inhabitants of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula. The term "black people" is a broader racial categorization that refers to individuals with dark skin tones. While some Moors may have had dark skin, it is misleading to use the term "black people" exclusively for them, as it oversimplifies the complexities of racial and ethnic identities.