The plague was spread by fleas that lived on the rats.
Rats in this time carried the Black Plague also known as the beubonic plague. My History teacher gave me this vid link "http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZy6XilXDZQ" it's about the black plague and they also do other history songs.
The plague was spread by fleas on rats. Rats boarded trade ships in the East and jumped off at various harbors around Europe, spreading the plague wherever they landed.
More properly, a LACK of science played a role. The means by which the Bubonic Plague was spread was unknown (disease spread by fleas from rats). It was blamed on night fogs, cats, and bad air. When the cats were killed, there were more rats to spread the disease.
Geography played a role in preventing the spread of the plague by creating natural barriers like mountains, rivers, and oceans that limited the movement of infected individuals and rats carrying the disease. Isolated areas were less likely to be exposed to the plague due to these geographic features, helping to contain its spread.
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black death was spread by Mongols. While traders also played an important role.
Fleas transmitted the disease from rats to humans.
Apostles in the Bible were chosen by Jesus to be his closest followers and spread his teachings. They played a key role in spreading the message of Christianity and establishing the early church.
Yes they did because they were the first things to get 'The Black Death' and their bodys could not handle the symptoms of 'The Black Death'. So as the days passed by the rats slowly died and the humans usally caught the disease because the rats would live in there house and usally get everywhere back in the 'Medievil' times because it wasn't clean.
Missionaries had to travel to distant lands to spread Buddhist teachings.
The apostles named in the Bible were twelve men chosen by Jesus to spread his teachings. They played a key role in spreading the message of Christianity and establishing the early church.
P.L. Simond conducted an experiment in 1898 to study the transmission of bubonic plague by fleas. He demonstrated that fleas could act as vectors for the transmission of the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis from rats to humans. This experiment was instrumental in establishing the role of fleas in the spread of the disease.