eyam
Yes, many were.
Black Death struck Europe in 1346 to 1353. People thought that it was anger of god.
hygein
The black death originated in Africa when there was a huge earthquake. Some Italian merchants living near the Black sea caught the disease and tried to escape it by going n a boat to Europe. When they arrived there, they infected the rest of Europe.
In the fourteenth century, the Black Death was plaguing Europe.
it was believed to be a punishment from God to the people of Europe excluding Scotland
The black death reached Europe in 1347, probably first through Italy via ships from the Eastern Mediterranean. Over the next 10-12 years it touched virtually every part of Europe, as well as the Middle East and North Africa. Estimates of overall losses are that as much as one third of the population of Europe died in that period. That is only an average, some localities had much higher death rates. There are known examples of towns having death rates of up to 90%. The worst of the plague was over by the end of the 1350's, but it continued to flare up for centuries, and there were smaller outbreaks until the 18th century.
Some parts of Ireland and Scotland. They were the last affected with Black Death.
the effects were , the fleas bit the people which course a fiver which killed the people but some of the people who got the plague died with out the fiver. It also caused a reduction in the population of Europe. After the black death was over about 70%-75% of the population lost their lives.
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.
Sierra Nevada, Vosages of Europe,Black Forest in Germany, Death Valley in California are some examples of fault-block mountains.
Sierra Nevada, Vosages of Europe,Black Forest in Germany, Death Valley in California are some examples of fault-block mountains.