You mean 'Bubonic Plague' or 'Black Death'. It reached Scotland in 1349.
In 1665 the plague reached London. It was called the Great Plague. About 70, 000 people died.
Scotland and the Black DeathYes, Scotland suffered from the Black Death. (Plagues don't respect borders). ANSWERin Edinburgh there is a famous place called Mary kings close where hundreds of plague (and some non plague ) victims were walled up inside and left to die.FURTHER INFORMATIONThe plague outbreak which Mary King's Close is famously associated with happened in 1645. The story about plague victims being walled up is a myth. It is haunted, however, and well worth going on the tour.The Black Death is the name for the plague outbreak which spread across Europe and England around 1349. The Scots spent a year or so laughing at the misfortune of the English, and assembled an army to take advantage of the situation. Before they could attack the plague spread across the border and killed most of them. The rest fled back to the Highlands taking the disease with them.
There is not a 100% agreement on the subject, but the most common theory is that the plague was a strain of Y. Pestis bacteria. It is also believed that the same bacteria was behind the Plague of Justinian. This plague erupted in the year 541 AD and recurred frequently until the year 750. This plague had a major effect in the collapse of the culture and antiquity and the course of history in the early middle ages.
The Great Plague of London 1665 -1666 killed 100,000 people. The Great Plague in Portugal was in 1348 and in Milan 1629 - 1631. The Great Plague of Vienna 1679 - 1670. The Russian Plague 1770 - 1772. The Chinese 1885 until the 1950's. In 1994 an epidemic in Surat, India
The Church of Scotland originated in 1560 under John Knox, the great theologian.
In 1665 the plague reached London. It was called the Great Plague. About 70, 000 people died.
Just within a year it reached England. Black Death spread 1346 to 1353.
A Journal of the Plague Year was created in 1722.
A Journal of the Plague Year - album - was created in 1999.
Scotland and the Black DeathYes, Scotland suffered from the Black Death. (Plagues don't respect borders). ANSWERin Edinburgh there is a famous place called Mary kings close where hundreds of plague (and some non plague ) victims were walled up inside and left to die.FURTHER INFORMATIONThe plague outbreak which Mary King's Close is famously associated with happened in 1645. The story about plague victims being walled up is a myth. It is haunted, however, and well worth going on the tour.The Black Death is the name for the plague outbreak which spread across Europe and England around 1349. The Scots spent a year or so laughing at the misfortune of the English, and assembled an army to take advantage of the situation. Before they could attack the plague spread across the border and killed most of them. The rest fled back to the Highlands taking the disease with them.
The black plague, also known as the bubonic plague, started in Central Asia in 1338 and 1339...it then reached China and India by 1346. By 1347 it infected the Black Sea port of Kaffa. The first outbreaks in Enland started in 1348. In July 1349, it spread to Scotland and by 1350 it was in Scandanavia. By 1351 it was in Kiev, Ukraine.
That fateful year saw the world's population enduring what is believed to be a recurrence of the bubonic plague, also known as the Black Death or the Black Plague. It is further widely believed that the Black Death was responsible for the deaths of 38,000 Londoners that year.
1347
PFA Scotland Manager of the Year was created in 2007.
Scotland started in 1976
how many cars crashes are there in scotland every year
1000 per year