Samuel Pepys
the black death (the great plague) started in holland 1645 and then transported to London in 1665 . A bit like swine flu.
The Great Fire of London occurred Which in all probability help to wipe out the remaining infestations of the plague.
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.
The Great Plague (1665), and the Fire of London (1666) You should read the longVictoriannovel about it - with the off-putting title 'Old St. Paul's' by Harrison Ainsworth. Rattling good yarn, that one.
no because the plague with not killing so many people
The Bubonic Plague that afflicted London from 1665 was ended by the Great Fire of London in 1666.
The great fire of London happened after the plague in 1666.
the great fire of london
the black death (the great plague) started in holland 1645 and then transported to London in 1665 . A bit like swine flu.
The great fire of London happened after the plague in 1666
The Bubonic Plague was rampant in London in 1665 and was eradicated by the fire in 1666.
The Great Fire of London occurred Which in all probability help to wipe out the remaining infestations of the plague.
The disater in London before the great fire of london, was a out break of the plague, which is also commonly known as the black death. The plague spread through London, killing many people in the year 1665.
The Bubonic Plague of 1665 - largely purged by the Fire of London in 1666.
The Bubonic Plague of 1665 was eradicated by the Great Fire of London in 1666.
no it ended in 1666 by the great fire of london
The plague ceased when the great fire of London happened and finnished the epidemic in the UK by the fire killing the rats and fleas