yes it was. and this form of the plague affected the blood and caued the skin to turn black hence the reason they called it the BLACK DEATH
In addition to the bubonic plague, there are two other different diseases caused by the same organism, called the septicemic plague and the pneumonic plague. The bubonic plague is spread by rats and fleas; a person gets it by being bitten by an infected flea. The septicemic form is the same disease, except that it has spread into a person's blood stream, where it progresses more rapidly and is more likely to be lethal. If the plague gets into a person's lungs, then the form is the pneumonic plague, and it can be spread in the droplets in the air when that person coughs; another person can catch the pneumonic plague by breathing the air.
The black death was a specific outbreak of diseases caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, in 1347 to about 1352 in Europe. Historically, there has been some question about this, with some scholars suggesting different organisms being the cause, but modern forensics seem to support Yersinia pestis as the cause.There are three manifestation of disease, referred to as the bubonic plague, the septicemic plague, and the pneumonic plague. Most usually, the disease is bubonic, referring to the buboes or very swollen lymph nodes present. If the disease gets into the blood system, it becomes septicemic, and is very much more likely to be fatal. The pneumonic manifestation happens when the disease gets into the lungs, and in this form it can be spread by the droplets a person coughs up into the air, with the new victims getting it first in the lungs.There is a link below.
The black death is also known as 'The Black Plague' but the scientific name for it is the bubonic plague.
One type is from a bite of a flea that carries the disease. The spot where the person is bitten turns black and forms a pustule. The other type was carried by the air and came from a cough of an infected person ( like the flu). The people who got the plague this way died faster than the people with the bite.
The Black Death (AKA The Bubonic Plague, The plague) didn't really "start" or "end" on specific dates. There are some rare cases of The Bubonic plague today. The peak of the Black Death was around 1347- 1352
Another name for the plague is the black death
The bacteria that is believed to be the main cause of Black Death (bubonic plague, pneumonic plague and septicemic) is yersinia pestis.
The body bled from within. The lymph nodes turned black from bleeding and the skin did as well.
There are three types:Bubonic plague has a1-15% 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 casesPneumonic plague has 100% mortality rate if not treated within 24 hours of infection.
Answer:Technically, no, but they both happened at the same time The Black Death had two plagues during it, the Pneumonic and the BUBONIC so I can see where your coming fromMore:Bubonic plague is one of three possible manifestations of a disease, and the Black Death was one specific epidemic of the same disease, in which all manifestations appeared. (In addition to the bubonic and pneumonic forms of the plague, there is a form called septicemic).Please use the link below for more information.
There is not a 100% agreement on what pathogen (or combination of pathogens) caused the black death, but the dominant opinion is that it was caused by a strain of the Y. Pestis bacteria, which in its modern forms can cause pneumonic, septicemic, and bubonic plague.
Answer to "Were there other names for the black death?"Another name for the Black Death is the Black Plague. In the Middle Ages, people called it the "Great Pestilence"' and the "Great Plague." Medieval writers referred to the plague as the "Great Mortality." The term "Black Death" has actually only been used since 1833. AlsoThe names for the 3 different forms of the Black Death were the Bubonic plague, Septicemic plague, and the Pneumonic Plague.Answer to "Were there other names for the black death?"· Great Pestilence · Great Plague· Great Mortality· Black Death· Black Plague· Bubbonic Plague· Septicemic plague· Pneumonic Plague
Septicemic plague may cause death even before its symptoms occur. Symptoms can include:Abdominal painBleeding due to blood clotting problemsDiarrheaFeverLow blood pressureNauseaOrgan failureVomitingRead more at the link below
The three types of plague are: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic.
The common name for bubonic plague is the Black Death.
yes black death and the plague are the same things
They are different names for the same thing.