Industrialized cities often led to poor living and working conditions for laborers, significantly impacting their life spans. The crowded, unsanitary environments and long hours in hazardous factories contributed to health issues such as respiratory diseases, injuries, and Infectious Diseases. Additionally, the lack of access to healthcare and inadequate nutrition further exacerbated these problems, resulting in lower life expectancy for many workers. Overall, while industrialization brought economic growth, it also introduced serious challenges to the health and well-being of the working population.
it can affect it from where people are and what they do
The monopoly on cities trading of the fourteenth century did affect the urban life.
bank,to open the new branches rise of commerce......to affect life in towns and cities public to give the lot of opportunity and offers.......
Depends on where they are. Industrial workers in countries that had industrialized more than a century ago have an okay life in the upper lower or lower middle class. In countries just entering industrialization, life ain't great.
How you think your life would have been if you lived in anation that never industrialized?
Cities could not be built upon hills.
Like most workers, a working life.
Because its more natural
The plague affected normal business and life of the capital by taking out many workers, clergy and nobility, which resulted in the weakening of the fedual system of castes.
E-mail can make life easier by being able to contact family and friends easily. It can also make your work life easier by being able to communicate with co-workers at all times.
The bubonic plague killed many people including peasants/workers, so a lot of manor work was left neglected.
they had a hard life