answersLogoWhite

0

How the Justinian plague started?

Updated: 12/13/2022
User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How the Justinian plague started?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about General History

What was the sixth-century plague of Justinian?

The Justinian plague affected the Roman Empire from 541-542 AD. The Bubonic plague or the black death name was not used by that time but historians are sure that it is the same thing.


What treatments were used for the Justinian plague?

Shiana dried tity milk


Did The Justinian Plague had little effect on society in the Roman Empire society due to the size and power of the Empire.?

No, the Justinian Plague had a significant impact on the society of the Roman Empire. It is estimated to have killed millions of people and caused widespread economic disruption. The plague weakened the empire and contributed to its eventual decline.


Who was justinian and what were his accomplishments?

Justinian I or the Great was Byzantine Emperor. He sought to restore the empire and recover the lost western empire. His generals defeated the Vandals (and restored Africa), the Ostrogoths (restoring Italy and Dalmatia) and regained most of southern Spain. This increased imperial revenues by 1 million solides, ushering an age of splendour which was ended by a plague (the Plague of Justinian) which took the empire into a period of decline that lasted 400 years. Justinian also started a great building programme and he rebuilt the famous Hagia Sophia. He commissioned the Corpus Iuris Civilis (Body of Civil Law; which was later dubbed the Justinian Code) the largest digest of Roman civil law ever made which gave Roman civil law more uniformity and later provided the foundation of civil laws in many modern countries. His reign is seen as a distinct epoch of the empire of the east.


What are the black plague bacteria called?

There is not a 100% agreement on the subject, but the most common theory is that the plague was a strain of Y. Pestis bacteria. It is also believed that the same bacteria was behind the Plague of Justinian. This plague erupted in the year 541 AD and recurred frequently until the year 750. This plague had a major effect in the collapse of the culture and antiquity and the course of history in the early middle ages.

Related questions

What was the sixth-century plague of Justinian?

The Justinian plague affected the Roman Empire from 541-542 AD. The Bubonic plague or the black death name was not used by that time but historians are sure that it is the same thing.


how much healthy people were there during the Justinian plague?

7000000000


What are the symptoms of the Justinian plague?

The plague of Justinian is believed to be the first recorded instance of the bubonic plague. The symptoms include necrosis of the hand, and swollen lymph glands. As the disease got worse, the lymph nodes could hemorrhage and become necrotic.


What was the pandemic that ravaged Constantinople in the sixth century called?

Justinian Plague


What treatments were used for the Justinian plague?

Shiana dried tity milk


The pandemic that ravaged Constantinople in the sixth century was called the?

Justinian Plague


What started the suspicious of witchcraft?

The plague.


What is the reservoir for the bubonic plague?

The Plague started in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia. I know of no reservoir.


When did the plague spread to Europe?

It started about 1347.


Whene did the plague start?

The Plague started in 1340 in England on ships. Too many germs.


How was the Sioux tribe started?

they had to move because of the plague so that's how they started


Did The Justinian Plague had little effect on society in the Roman Empire society due to the size and power of the Empire.?

No, the Justinian Plague had a significant impact on the society of the Roman Empire. It is estimated to have killed millions of people and caused widespread economic disruption. The plague weakened the empire and contributed to its eventual decline.