it was not stopped - it had to run it's course and did not discriminate as to wealth or age or sex. there is a fascinating documentary about it on the history channel - you should watch - this does not anserr the question!! the answer is that ppl carried herbs and floral petal to try and drive away the epidemic. clearly it did not work.
1350
To try and stop the Black Death in the mid 1300's in Europe, people went out of their way to avoid others. They especially avoided people who were not well off. They thought the Black Death was a poor man's disease. People stayed indoors and only came outside when necessary. They burned sage and other herbs to keep the disease away from their door.
They did not ever come up with a cure for it. The disease killed most of the population and then, finding few new victims, burned itself out.
Circumcision followed by castration. They had a big drive to stop criminals reproducing.
nothing at all! They couldn't stop it
They didn't care, all they did was support the Black Death and let it spread through out Europe because the Spanish we're hardly affected by it. This is also why the Spanish had better trade. This is all because of how Spain was not landlocked and Northern Europe was.
after the great fire of London XD
it is a process to stop and prevent Black Death. Mainly people focus on hygiene and better cleaning of streets.
In medieval times (when the black plague was at it's fiercest people did not understand that the black plague was caught from fleas but thought it was an illness from Lucifer/satin/the devil. The medieval people thought the sickness would stop being contagious after the bodies were burnt. Unfortunately for them the fleas had fled the body long before it was burnt thus creating more sickness and death.
Eventually the black death stoped and faded because every body had roses under there mouth so they will not breath in the disease
They're doing science.
The black death went on for a long time, and there are many different arguments about when it started and finished. But most accounts tell that the Black Death came to a steady decrease and a final stop in 1358.