Black Death 1347-1350

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Transcript Black Death 1347-1350

Black Death
1347-1350
By:Jessi Freeman
and
Morgan Tew
Bubonic Pneumonic
Septicement
Bubonic, Pneumonic, and Septicement are
the three forms of the Black Death. The
Bubonic was more common, but the all
killed in vicious ways.
This picture is when you first get Black
Death. You turn a dark shade of purple.
This picture is after Black Death kills you.
“The Dance of Death” by Hans Holbein the
Younger. Before Black Death music was
happy and frequently heard.
Click here to see the effect on Europe.
Within 1347-1352 25 million people died in
Europe.
Black Death has an order of death and this is the chronological order of
events.
Doctors wore robes to protect themselves from the
deadly disease. The beaks on their face acted as a filter
to keep out the nasty diseases so they wouldn’t catch it
and help the others.
The Christian Church was one of the groups that suffered
the most. They said it was God’s will , but the reason of the
punishment was unknown.
Bibliography
Bingham, Jane. Medieval World. New York, NY: Scholastic Inc., 1999. 13 Dec.
2007.
Deary, Terry. Measly Middle Ages. New York, NY: Scholastic Inc., 1997. 13 Dec.
2007.
Knox, E.L. Skip. "The Black Death." History of Western Civilization. 13 Dec. 2007
<http://history.boisestate.edu/westciv/plague>.
"The Black Death, 1348." Eye Witness to History. 13 Dec. 2007
<www.eyewitnesstohistory.com>.
"The Black Death: Bubonic Plague." The Middle Ages. 2007. 13 Dec. 2007
<www.themiddleages.net/plague.html>.