The Great Fire of London in September 1666 destroyed all the rats which carried the plague.
The Great Plague ended in the month of September
September 1666 with the Great Fire of London.
1666
London was a major port at the time of the Great Plague of 1665. Rats would come off of the ships visiting London and those rats carried fleas which started the Plague. The Great Fire of London the following year, killed all the rats and put an end to the Plague.
1666 is the year of the Great Fire of London which destroyed 10,000 houses, 87 churches, and made 27,000 people homeless. It also put an end to the Bubonic Plague epidemic that had started the previous year.
After the great fire of London, many rats were killed, this helped stop the spreading. Also, so many people were dying, the germ kind of ran out of places to go.
The Great Fire of London STARTED in Pudding Lane and by the end, there were no streets left - they had all been burned.
longbow, bubonic plague, hundred years' war, the great schism. i think..?
London was a major port at the time of the Great Plague of 1665. Rats would come off of the ships visiting London and those rats carried fleas which started the Plague. The Great Fire of London the following year, killed all the rats and put an end to the Plague.
During the late 1600's hen living conditions in London finally improved due to the great fire of London on Sept. 2, 1666
The great plague of London started in 1665. it started by the Italian's catapulting dead carcasses into London which contaminated London with rats and fleas. Therefore starting the great plague.
1666 is the year of the Great Fire of London which destroyed 10,000 houses, 87 churches, and made 27,000 people homeless. It also put an end to the Bubonic Plague epidemic that had started the previous year.
After the great fire of London, many rats were killed, this helped stop the spreading. Also, so many people were dying, the germ kind of ran out of places to go.
It didn't stop entirely, it still crops up this day in small numbers. Search mnemonic plague and bubonic plague. THE BUBONIC PLAGUE IS STILL AROUND IN SMALL NUMBERS AND IS TREATED WITH ANTIBIOTICS.
Many Loyalist under American control faced London policymakers at the end of the great war.
The Great Fire of London STARTED in Pudding Lane and by the end, there were no streets left - they had all been burned.
I am afraid you are confusing the Black Death, 1347-1350 (roughly) with the Great Plague, which indeed did start in 1665, ending in 1666. In London, it was swept out by the Great Fire of London - a dramatic end for a dreadful epidemic
5 September 1666
It would be towards the end of summer - leading into autumn.
The London West End website is great. It gives you information on events and tourist attractions . It also tells you the whole history about the west end of London.