William's som Hamnet died of the Black Death in 1596 at the age of 11
Ebola
in fact the plague does kill you but the symptoms are bulges on the neck and body in fact why they call it black death is the bulges turn black and burst that's why you die
Black Death could kill you from two to three days. Sometimes it might take weeks to kill you.
Depends which plague you are referring to.
No he had nothing to do with killing he was an explorer
They did not know that plague was spread by vermin, so the did not kill off anything.
The Plague was the most deadly because it could kill people within days of them contracting the disease.
I don't think they didn't kill.
If it did, then who is writing this answer, and who is reading it? While Bubonic Plague (the Black Death) did kill about 1/3 of the population of Europe, it did not kill every single person in the universe. The plague began about 1340, and is believed to have originated near China. A horde of Mongols attacked a remote trading outpost of an Italian merchant, and the attackers had an outbreak of plague. This was transmitted to the traders, brought back to Italy, and spread through Europe. Sanitation was not good in that time period, and the plague was spread by fleas carried by rats. People did not understand contagious diseases, and had no antibiotic drugs to cure it.
kill them selves
In general, they didn't, any more than humans did. Bubonic plague is deadly to rats and most rodents, just like it is to humans. However, given the very rapid breeding times of rats, bubonic plague is unable to wipe out entire rat populations. So, just as the Black Death didn't kill all humans (at least some were immune, and others recovered after infection), it doesn't kill all rats.
The Radleys in "To Kill a Mockingbird" were white. They were a reclusive white family who lived near the Finch family in Maycomb.