You caught the black death when a plaged flea that had bitten a plaged rat reguritated the plague into your blood system before sucking your blood. Within four to five day a grown adult would be dead.
yes, but don't worry it's only in some places!
Day 1 you grow Buebos Day 2 Develop a fever Day 3 Coughing up Blood levaing Black Marks on Skin Day 4 Spasm Day 5 Buebos burst oozing with a black smelly liquid causing a VERY painful death
The black death started around 1437 in Europe.
The Black Death spread across Europe at 4km
The Black Death was spread by fleas and rats. ik..gross
in the philipians
it was important because the black death could risk a life of someone if they catch it.
you cant really cant something as harmful and leeful as the black death today.
People caught Black Death by the fleas transferring the virus to humans.
The first recorded case of the Black Death was in China in 1334, spreading along trade routes. It is not possible to identify a single person as the first to catch the disease due to its rapid spread and lack of detailed historical records.
the black plague does still exist today, however it is a really rare disease
yes, but don't worry it's only in some places!
It was a disease passed on by contact with people who were infected & fleas, EVERYONE could get it.
It was bad, because people didn't want to catch the disease.
Er... I don't think two plagues combined to make the black death, but there were two ways the black death killed. 1. A flea bit you - the bubonic plague. After growing buboes, coughing blood and getting fevers, bleeding under the skin, which looks like severe bruising, appears. This is what gives the Black Death its name. 2. You are talking to a victim and they sneeze. If they don't catch it, you are infected. If they do catch it, you might not be infected, but if they catch with their hand, then touch you, you will be infected. The pneumonic plague.
Pretty rare, but there are still places where it happens, Mongolia is one such place.
No one knows how chaucer died. He disappeared from historical records suddenly.