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    The Black Death Summary

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    In Sean Martin, “The Black Death” is a book that goes into the history of the plague that affected Europe. The author provides in-depth details of exactly what happened at the start of the black plague which was in 1347. That was carried by merchants through trade routes on the silk road. He also talks about the origins and where it originally came from with the help of sources that was documented at the time. The author talks about the first pandemic known as the “Plague of Justinian” and says…

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    In the year 1347 the bubonic plague took about fifty percent of Europe in the Middle Ages, rapidly spreading and killing off the human population. The plague brought in many changes in religion, literature, power sources, and technology. Just like the bubonic plague the world is hit with a nasty disease that takes nearly half the population in a matter of months. Now the after effects are kicking in and changes are happening everywhere, but for the good, or for the bad? The world is now…

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    What would you do if you woke up and your entire family were sick with the plague? would you take care of them? Furthermore, what would you do if the if you realized the people you believed in to help you and your family wouldn’t? What if the world on the other side of this devastation would be something completely different? That was a reality for most in Europe during the Black Death. The Black Death the way society was in Europe By making people change their morals and how they treated each…

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    The Black Plague Dbq

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    “Father abandoned child, wife husband, one brother another, for the plague seemed to strike through breath and sight. And so they died. And no one could be found to bury the dead, for money or friendship.” This was how Agnolo di Tura described the plague in 1350. Citizens of European towns felt they could not even trust their own family, afraid that the plague would catch simply through being near each other. This horrible sickness broke family ties and friendships through its destruction of…

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    The deadly disease known as The Black Death killed about 1-3 of Europe`s population. It helped start modern medicine. It changed the way Europe worked. The Black Death is considered one of the deadliest diseases in the history of mankind. The Black Death was a terrible disease that killed between 25 to 50 percent of Europe`s population. It came to Europe because they traded with the east. There were 3 different types of it. The most common of them was called the Bubonic Plague. It`s…

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    The Black Death, also known as the bubonic plague, caused by a bacteria called Yersinia Pestis, ravaged the population of Europe in the middle ages. “Localized epidemics of bubonic plague occurred with relative frequency, but only twice did the plague affect a wide enough swath of the population to be labeled a pandemic, or widespread epidemic” (The Black Death Arrives). When it did, over half the population of Europe died from exposure to the plague. Europe was densely populated and living…

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    Though there are many differing opinions, it is easy to realize that feudalism did more harm than it did good. One of the main reasons to support this is that feudalism didn’t treat everyone equally, giving more (often undeserved) privilege to one part of the population. This is shown when the textbook states, “Feudalism did not . . . let them [people] move up in society” (MEMT 345). The above quote alludes to how it was impossible to move your rank in the social hierarchy, which constrained…

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    Everyone dies. It’s a known fact of life. It’s only a big deal when a bunch of people die at once. This is what happened at early Jamestown, but no one knows what happened to everyone. Early Jamestown is the first people who discovered it. In 1607 110 Englishman arrived to the new world and settled at Jamestown in what is now Virginia. It was the first English colony in the New World. One year later the population went down to only 40 people. Why did so many people die? Colonists in Jamestown…

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    The Plague Dbq Analysis

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    People in the 14th century’s understanding of the plague was inaccurate because their reasoning for how the plague originated from and how to cure themselves from the plague were wrong. In document A, it states that the plague originated from “the constellations which combated the rays of the sun that exerted their power especially against the sea and the waters of the ocean arose in the form of vapor. The waters were in some parts so corrupted that the fish died. Causing the vapor to spread…

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    In order to understand the concept of the motet, one must first be familiar the musical developments preceding the motet. Although the motet first appears in the 13th century, we can trace its ancestry back as far as the 9th century with the rising popularization of polyphony. Beginning in the Carolingian period (800-1000), composers began to take preference in writing polyphony which provided many opportunities to further explore the depth of musical texture. Early polyphonic music became known…

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