Ring o' ring o' roses
The nursery rhyme "Ring-a-ring of roses" does not actually commemorate a historic event. It is commonly believed to be based on the Great Plague of London in 1665, but this connection has been widely debated and there is no concrete evidence to support it.
To be cured from the Bubonic Plague you can use antibiodics. In the previous bubonic plagues when it was a plague there was no cure.
"Ring Around the Rosie" is often thought to describe the symptoms of the bubonic plague - the "rosie" representing the red rash, the "pocket full of posies" referring to the belief that carrying flowers would ward off illness, the "ashes" standing for the practice of burning infected bodies, and the "we all fall down" symbolizing the high mortality rates of the plague.
The Bubonic Plague
The Pneumonic plague, (internal bubonic plague,) constricted your throat muscles.
the Bubonic Plague occurred in Europe about 400 years ago
Bubonic Plague is caused by the bacterium, Yersinia pestis.
The Bubonic Plague killed millions of people.
the bubonic plague, spread by rats bitten bye infected fleas
Yes ring a ring of roses or whatever it was called has somthing to do with the black death
Well really there were three- the most common being the bubonic plague.
Most would argue that the nursery rhyme "Ring Around the Rosie" is based off the Bubonic plague. The first written copy of this song appeared in print in 1881, but this song has been sung since before 1790.