your mum's virgina
Bubonic Plague was spread by being bitten by fleas that had bitten infected rats.
the bubonic plague, spread by rats bitten bye infected fleas
Fleas on rats and people who were already infected.
The rats that were infected with the bubonic plague likely originated in Asia and spread to Europe during the 14th century through trade routes. The fleas on these infected rats transmitted the disease to humans, causing one of the deadliest pandemics in history.
people turn into zombies because if an infected person bites you the saliva mixes with your blood and you become infected people turn into zombies because if an infected person bites you the saliva mixes with your blood and you become infected
The biggest bubonic plague breakout in history was The Black Death, which infected Central Asia, Egypt, & parts of Europe. The plague killed over 25 million people in Europe alone! That's a third of Europe's population!
They still believe it was fleas that were infected by the bubonic plague lived and fed off of the rats. When the rats walked around the people of London the fleas would jump onto them and bite thus giving it to humans.
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.
No. Bubonic plague is transmitted by fleas carried by infected rats or people. The pathogen is typically carried by rodents. In the case of the waves of plague that ravaged Europe and the Mid-East in the middle ages, it was carried by rats and other infected humans.The disease you may be confusing bubonic plague with could be cholera which is transmitted by contamination of water by an infected person's feces.Answer:No, it was caused by rats, but not their excrete. the bubonic plague and pneumonic plague were started by rats who jumped off a ship that had come from countries infected with the plague. It wasn't actually the rats that started it, either. fleas travelled in the dirty hairs of the rats and then flourished in the grime and unhygienic areas near London. The plague spread quickly throughout England and Ireland, and only a small part of Scotland was not affected. 1 in 3 people died, altogether. Many towns and villages were quarantined to stop the plague spreading.
The Bubonic plague effected society because there was no sewer lining and lots of people were dying and there wasn't much help that could be given.
This is a very nasty infectious disease, usually called the Bubonic plague, or the black death (but not the bubonic death). It has killed a lot of people.
because he wanted to show people how he felt and to let his feelings out