It didn't. Perhaps you are referring to the Plague Pandemic, but that didn't occur until the 1340s.
Bubonic Plauge
Depends on the time frame, but the likeliest answer is infection with Yersinia pestis, the etiological agent that causes the plauge or Black DeathIt was because their noses were too small and it blocked them from breathing.
It's a deadly desease that causes black sores to form on your body, then you die. It decimated the population.
He died of the plague that swept away a third of the population of Athens in 429 BCE.
One third of Europe's population was estimated to have died from the bubonic plague. Many more still perished due to the effects of people dying without actually contracting the disease themselves, such as a lack of food because farmers die.
Brusing and burboes would appear in grion and neck then in 4-6 days you would die
More people die than are born during a given period is a statement that describes negative population growth. The statement describes negative population in Western Europe.
The Black Death killed almost half of the population of Europe and Britain.
Yes!! Most everyone who got it died, it killed a third of Europe population in 1347 -1400. They haven't found a cure for it and 10- 20 people in the United states die from in a year, but you would have to be unbelievably filthy and have fleas in order to contract it, You get in from a flea's bite or being in close proximity to someone who has it. but don't worry! it's extremely rare!
yes cancer existed in the 1400's there was no treatment but it did exist people died from it all the time
he did not die on his third voyage because he had a voyage the next year.
it was because they had to let the knights be in battle to kill each other and let them die, because they need to.
The carnivores, or the third level consumers, at the top of that food chain would die off first.