The plague didn't really prevent anything. I guess you could say it did prevent the advancement of Europe, which let it fall behind the Eastern World for a time because with all the sick people, there was not much time for science, culture, or the Arts. Also, you could say that it sped up up the end of Feudalism because Feudalism works with the system of a few people ruling over many people. The plague took the many people in the equation away, and the system just fell on itself.
The bubonic plague was called the Great Pestilence, Great Plague, or Great Mortality during the Middle Ages. Somewhat later it was called the Black Death. There is a link below.
Fleas spread the plague
The plague
right it was bull
The goal of The Middle Ages is to help students understand the basic. The barbarian invasions, feudalism, the Crusades, the devastation of the plague.
Since the middle ages where preoccupied with the plague, we have no way to know how the Middle Ages would have been without the plague.
The bubonic plague was called the Great Pestilence, Great Plague, or Great Mortality during the Middle Ages. Somewhat later it was called the Black Death. There is a link below.
black plague
Fleas spread the plague
The plague
Plague, Yersinia pestis, bubonic plague, black plague, black death, fleas, rats, middle ages.
The first answer that comes to mind is the plague.
The bubonic plague
3/4 of Europe died.
3/4 of Europe died.
right it was bull
to protect against the black plague