Three fourths of Europe died. That means there were jobs that didn't have workers, government positions were open, and whole towns were dead. It did allow people to move up in society and take the place of people who died. This created a new middle class.
Medieval Europe cannot be said to have gone 'into decline' at any point. The only major incident to seriously weaken medieval Europe was the outbreak of the Black Death (the plague) in the 14th century, since this carried off about 150 million people in all; depending on which country in Europe you look at, between 20 and 80 percent of the population
it was always faith
There were a long list of diseases with fever as a symptom that could kill a person in medieval times. Perhaps the best known was the Black Plague, which spread through nearly all of Europe during the period of 1346 to 1352. It kill huge numbers of people, perhaps half the people in Europe. It was so deadly that it changed European society profoundly, contributing the the end of serfdom and, eventually, the medieval era.
the black plague
a black knight was a knight who either didnt serve a king or didnt want his king to be identified
Medieval Europe.
Europeans began questioning their faith in the catholic church
Black plague 3/4 of Europe died.
I would not liked to have lived in Medieval Europe because with the Black Death going around I probably would have died.
In 14 century Lithuania was biggest country in Europe, from Baltic to Black sea
Medieval Europe cannot be said to have gone 'into decline' at any point. The only major incident to seriously weaken medieval Europe was the outbreak of the Black Death (the plague) in the 14th century, since this carried off about 150 million people in all; depending on which country in Europe you look at, between 20 and 80 percent of the population
Not at all. In fact, it wiped out most of medieval Europe. The Black Death is another name for the Bubonic Plague.
1/3 of Europe's population died, (75 million people).
One Third
it was always faith
There were many types of disease in medieval Europe. But the most common were: measles, cholera, and scarlet fever. The most feared disease was the Bubonic Plague also known as the "Black Death" No one knew how the disease was spread.
Black Death spread via major trade routes. Black Death entered Crimea first.