The Black Death was an outbreak of Bubonic Plague that happened in 1347 to 1352. This was a time that was before the end of the Middle Ages, but the Middle Ages and the Renaissance overlap to some extent, and many historians would put this after the Renaissance began. Also, the bubonic plague, or Black Death, returned many times after the Middle Ages, including during the Renaissance.
Black death or black pluage
Yes and no, depending on what you mean by the Black Death. Historically, the Black Death was an outbreak of bubonic plague that ran from 1347 to 1352 in Europe. This was long before the Reformation. The bubonic plague returned at numerous times, including during the Reformation, and some people refer to these epidemics as returns of the Black Death.
Necromancer
the looked black
The black death was a big turning point for Europe because of everything that had gone on during the black plague. After the black death people saw how terribly they wee living and disided to change it and now that have become much more cleaner and cautios.
Some major issues during the Renaissance included political conflicts among city-states and monarchs, religious tensions stemming from the Protestant Reformation, economic disparities leading to social unrest, and challenges to traditional beliefs and authority. These issues had profound effects on the development of art, literature, and society during this period.
the black death came to England aroud the 1300 - 1400
What were the fears during the black death?
Used personal experience as motivation
It started during Charles VIII's rule til Henry IV's death.
black is a symbol of death, darkness, sadness, shadows, strength, mystery and emptiness this colour is not even a colour, it's an abstract of all colours it represents all light being absorbed it cold also mean, fearful, threatened and a life of bad experience
During the renaissance, different colors had symbolic meanings. Dark red was the color that represented luxury and refinement and black meant boldness and sophistication.