During the time period between 5th and 15th century, religious and social changes impacted Europe immensely. One particular religious alteration was the decline of papacy authority, as a result of The Black Death. Another major change was the religious impact of the Protestant Reformation circa 1500. On the other hand, The Crusades socially altered the middle ages of Europe. Initially, the Black death appeared during the mid fourteenth century and resulted in european society to view it as a punishment sent by God.…
1. In the 17th century, population of Europe grew slowly but a cyclical pattern started to grow that had a great influence on the social and economic life. On factor that put down the population was the Black Death which created a sharp drop in the population and also created labor shortage throughout Europe. Also deaths started increasing in the 17th century such as famine, epidemic disease, and war caused huge drops in the population, or slows the population rate.…
Take Home Essay Questions (1) Conquest and trade are vehicles for shifting the powers between civilizations, exploration of new lands and the transfer of ideas, cultures, technologies, and disease. The results of continual conquest and expanding trade from 1300 to 1750 CE in Afro-Eurasia facilitated an increase in interconnection within its own borders as well as becoming a global market once sustained contact with the Americas was achieved. Mongol’s massive conquest over much of Afro-Eurasia, in the late 1200s to early 1300s, would lead the way to politically unifying a majority of overland and sea trade routes within Afro-Eurasia. The Mongols were able to fortify existing trade routes, push Chinese technology that helped all around with sea…
The Black Death had a great effect on the population of Europe from the time it started infecting people, to the height of the plague, and even after it ended. The Black Death began in Asia and the Far…
Labor was nearly extinct. A lack of architects, masons, and artisans left cathedrals and castles unfinished for centuries. Governments floundered in attempts to create order out of chaos. Shock flooded Europe ("The Effects of The Black Death on the Economic and Social Life of Europe."). People would see their neighbors healthy one day, and dead the next.…
The Laws had changed because of the Black Death. The Black Death had eventually had contributed to the decline of feudalism. The Black Death had spread through the Middle East, Asia, and had killed many people along the way. The disease had killed at least a third of people that lived in China, India, the Middle East, and North Africa (Barbor 205).The Black rat was infected with a flea called the Black Rat flea ("The Black Death a Catastrophe").It was the primary host for…
The Black Death was ‘one of the worst disasters in history’, killing a third of Europe’s population. In the 14th century the plague hit Asia and Europe, lasting from 1346 till 1352. The Black Death was an epidemic plague in the 1300’s, which spread rapidly throughout Asia and Europe. The causes of the Black Death weren’t just animals and fleas, humans played a great part in the spreading of the plague throughout Europe. Many symptoms were shown at early stages of the plague such as headaches, fever, vomiting, shock and fatigue.…
The bubonic plague made its way into European ports from Asian ships infested with rats carrying the disease. The sickness swept across Europe, leaving devastation in its wake. The ruin that the Black Death caused led to many consequences. Socially and economically, villages vanished. Laborers decreased as the population decreased, so the number of farms declined.…
The Black Death was a horrible disease that struck Europe in the mid 14th century. Originated in Asia, trade routes, like the Silk Road, allowed the spread of the plague to Europe. Bringing chaos and disruption to Europe, the Black Death, also known as the bubonic plague, changed the ways of the economy, politics, and society. Examples of political, economical, and social effects, is the uprising between the church and the people, the economy unable to produce goods, and the way how people view life. The Black Death changed the way of life for the Europeans; politically, economically, and socially.…
Review essay: The articles compared within this essay are John Hatcher’s ‘The Aftermath of the Black Death in England’ alongside James Westfall Thompson’s ‘The Aftermath of the Black Death and the Aftermath of the Great war’. Both articles discuss the economic impact of the Black Death, Hatcher’s focus is on England and the misconceptions of stability in England. With his main argument concerning whether the aftermath of the Black Death was truly a state of crisis and the inevitability of this disease. Whilst Thompson explores how the people throughout Europe were impacted and how the continent dealt with the crisis, with his argument taking a alternative approach focusing more on how the structure of societies began to transform and reshape themselves during this era, providing a broader perspective.…
The plague of 1348 also known as the “Black Death”, was an epidemic that changed the world. It got its name from the black spots it would give people. The Black Death was the most devastating pandemic in all of human history killing millions, but it wasn't the deadliest of all plagues. What made it so lethal was how easily it was transmitted by fleas and threw airborne droplets of saliva from coughs of the infected(“Social and Economics Effects of the Plague.”). The plague affected manly countries in europe and asia.…
How did the plague change medieval European society? Were the effects positive or negative? Eleni Petrakis In 1347, a plague of epic proportions attacked Medieval Europe and Asia, killing millions. This plague, caused by the bacteria Yersinia pestis carried on fleas and rats, was called the Black Death, and greatly contributed to the development of Europe.…
It is well known that there were several factors that aided to the decrease. One factor that was key to lower death rates during later epidemics was the increase in the quality of life. Heather Whipps of the Live Science Journal noted that, “Those who survived benefited from an extreme labor shortage, so serfs once tied to the land now had a choice of whom to work for. Lords had to make conditions better and more attractive or risk leaving their land untended, leading to wage increases across the board” (Whipps, 2008). Higher wages allowed for the once extremely poor serfs of Europe to better their lives in multiple ways.…
During the 14th century, around 75 to 200 million people died because of the disease known as the Black Plague. These numbers show that around a third of Europe’s population was completely wiped out. Many terrible changes occurred including the rich and the poor going against each other, blaming one another for causing this horrific disease. The Black Plague was the worst epidemic that has ever been recorded in the world’s history because of the disease’s ability to spread rapidly, the terrible process of infection, and as well as the long term effects that it had on Europe.…
However, with the extreme loss of life there was an accumulation of goods, a decrease in their price, a surplus of jobs and consequently a rise in wages. The standard of living actually increased. Also the need for paid workers resulted in movement away from feudalism and the development of a working class. All of these events paved the way for the coming Renaissance. Even though the Black Plague changed the world forever and is one of the most horrifying epidemics in world history, it was not all bad for the Roman Catholic Church, which is what most people believe was hit the hardest.…