Bubonic Plague has 1-15% mortality rate in treated cases and a 40-60% mortality rate in untreated cases. Septicemic plague has a 40% mortality rate in treated and 100% in untreated cases.
Pneumonic plague has 100% mortality rate if not treated within 24 hours of infection.
Estimates differ, but most historians believe that the Black Death killed half the population.
In some places, like the village of West Thickley in County Durham, it killed everybody.
The death-rate was especially bad in monasteries, where the monks stayed together and cared for each other.
The black plague occured in Europe from 1347-1351. It killed about 25 million people.
Black Death occurred in 1346 to 1353. Almost 75 to 200 million people died.
Over Half of Europe died during the Black death period
Over 2/3 of Europe died of the plague so the rest lived with it.
Over 3/4 of Europe died. Whole towns. Reports have as many as 6,000 people a day in some places.
Around 30-60% of Europe's population at the time, so about 75 million
3/4 of Europe died of the plague so every European country had it.
Probably 25 million people (about one-third of all people of Europe) died form the plague. Western Europe was the first to get hit by the plague. Italian trading ships returning from ports on the Black Sea brought back one of the most devaststing disease epidemics in history.
I know that 3/4 of Europe died so I expect that it was the same in Asia, if not more.
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plague continued spreading and many people died, which led to the black death
3/4 of Europe died on the plague. There are reports in places like Venice, Italy of over 5,000 people dead in one day.