Septicemic plague is one of the forms of Bubonic Plague. Instead of pustules, the disease is carried through the bloodstream and can be fatal within a matter of hours. The Black Death in Europe between 1347-1352 (with many later recurrences, although on a less dramatic scale) would likely be the date you are looking for. History does not have evidence of a strictly septicemic plague. Historians are also not certain if the Bubonic, Pneumonic, and Septicemic forms of Plague were the cause of the Black Death, but it is the most commonly accepted answer for the disease that killed about half of the population of Europe.
The epidemic that attacked the people of Europe was the Black Plague or the Black death.
The 1918-1919 Epidemic Of The Flu,And The Black Plague Epidemic.
That was a plague epidemic, which has two main forms: bubonic plague (you get a srt of boils filled with a cangrenous liquid which is black, hence the name) and a pneumonic form (which involves the respiratory tract). The Black Death was of course a bubonic plague epidemic.
The epidemic of bubonic plague in Europe known as The Black Death killed about 1/3 of the population.
black death
The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.The epidemic that we call the Black Death or the Black Plague occurred well after the fall of Rome in Medieval times. However ancient Rome did have several outbreaks of plague and it was one of the reasons that he wealthy liked to get out of the city during the heat of the summer.
Black plague
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
The first recorded epidemic of the Black Death / Bubonic Plague was in Europe during the 6th Century. The disease truly became pandemic in 1328
an epidemic disease
Yes.
You have coined a new word! Congratulations! "Epicdemic" must be an epidemic of epic proportions, I guess. Notable epidemics include the Black Death (the Bubonic Plague epidemic in fourteenth century Europe) or the Spanish 'flu epidemic in 1919.