yes it did yes it did
The Bubonic Plague (a.k.a The Black Plague) caused a dramatic decline in the population of Europe in the 1300s.
Lack of food; changes in environment that affect agriculture and hunting ability; disease (for example, the Black Plague); genocide
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.
Yes. From 1647 to 1652, a massive outbreak of the black plague in Spain killed up to a quarter of Seville's population.
Bubonic Plague (Black Plague) or (Black Death)
It was the Bubonic Plague (Black Death).
The epidemic of bubonic plague in Europe known as The Black Death killed about 1/3 of the population.
Black Death Plague killed half of world's population. So it affected very negatively.
Bubonic Plague (Black Death) had many effects and in most cases killed. The population in this time went down a lot, and the great fire of London wiped the black death out.
Black Death killed 75 to 200 million people. Population decreased by 30-60%.
1/3 of Europe's population was lost
Black plague