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
September, and the date depends on the specific college.
Each institution will have a start date particular to their own. Typically, Fall semester starts in September, and Spring semester starts in January. There are also summer sessions and interim semesters. However, you really need to contact the college or university you plan on attending for exact dates. Also remember that while the start of classes have one date, application to the school will start much earlier depending on the institution.
There isn't a specific date when it started but it has been in schools for ages.
The word "plague" has two meanings. "The Plague" is a specific disease, or rather a series of specific diseases: bubonic plague, pneumonic plague etc. On the other hand "a plague" is any rapidly spreading epidemic. The King James Bible, contemporary with Shakespeare, talks about "the plague of leprosy", and obviously leprosy and plague are two very different diseases. It is this secondary sense which Mercutio uses in his curse: he is wishing some unspecified epidemic disease on the Montagues and Capulets, not the specific disease called "the plague".
The Plague started in 1340 in England on ships. Too many germs.
St. Giles in the Fields had the first reported case of plague.
It depends on which plague.
in Mongolia
No one can say a specific date of the black plague (due to the fact of no one had a journal for these things thank you so much ancestors!) but it was landed in 1348. And come on use a fricking textbook guys. People can just say anything for you to believe -_-.
1348 i belive sorry if im wrong
1665 was the date of the Bubonic Plague when thousands died. 1666 was the date of the Great Fire of London which eradicated the plague and hardly anyone died in the fire.