28,840,000
14th
In the 14th century (during the bubonic plague) people drunk their own urine twice a day
Counted deaths by Pope ClementVI was about 23,840,000.
When People died of the Plague, the other people could get increased pay because there would be less people.
The Holy Roman Empire.
The Bubonic Plague. However, this wasn't the most devastating to Europeans in the 14th century. The Bubonic Plague spawned a new disease, the Black Death, which was the true killer.
It is estimated that between 30-60% of Europe's population died during the bubonic plague pandemic in the 14th century, known as the Black Death. This catastrophic event had a profound impact on society, economy, and culture in Europe.
In the 14th century, it killed about 60% of the European population, an estimated 100-200 million people.
The Bubonic Plague, which gave birth to the Black Death.
The black death refers to the the Bubonic Plague which swept through Eurasia (Europe and Asia) during the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries. It killed huge numbers of people in the 1347 epidemic, and continued to reoccur over the next few centuries.
no
The plague is an older disease, but the first Great Plague occurred in the 14th century in Europe, long after the first crusades.