Some people managed to survive due to a seemingly natural immunity to the bacillus that caused the disease. However, there were very few survivors, with entire villages often being wiped out as the plague swept through them.
During the Middle Ages, the Death Rate for Bubonic Plague (the "Black Death") varied from a low(!) of 70% to past 90%. Today, with early treatment, the death rate is 10% or below. But if treatment is not started until the disease has progressed a ways, the mortality rate is still about 70% in worst-case scenarios.
fifty million but if you catch it you'll be dead cause you're a wimp
About half the population, or less.
75 million people survived i think xx
Almost no one lived after getting the Black Death.
Many people who got the Black Death survived. Most did not, however, and it was pretty bad.
People caught Black Death by the fleas transferring the virus to humans.
The behaviour of the black death was out of control it spread so quickly over 1 million people died and every week thousands of people would had caught the black death. Most priests died of the black death the case was they had to pray with the people who caught the disease so they felt better and safer.
1 bilion people died from conner
The decendents of people that were infected but survived are immune to HIV
If one person out of the house hold caught the disease it was almost likely the rest would. But if they didn't maybe if you were lucky enough perhaps a quarter survived.
people say it was the rat but really it was fleas who the rats then caught and then they spreaded the black death (plauge)
Black Death was spread by fleas and rats. People working closer to them caught it more.
they was porsecuted
Black death was caught by rats that came on the ships of vikings. The disease actually comes from the ticks on the rats.
The Black Death is curable, if caught early, by using antibiotics.