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Bubonic Plague

Submitted by lamia37 on March 28, 2007

Category: History Other
Words: 991 | Pages: 4
Views: 200
Popularity Rank: 55,499
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Throughout history there were many illnesses and diseases reported; many of them incurable and killed a chunk of the world's population. One of these worldly devastations was the Bubonic plague which took place in the 1300s during the time of the middle ages. This terrible plague had spread from Asia, Europe, to Northern Africa from 1347-1352. An astrologer by the name of Simon de Covinus from Belgium, was the first to write a poem in Latin about the epidemic which he called "mors nogra" meaning Black Death (2004, Byrne, Pg.1).
During the mid-1300s, the bubonic plague first appeared in Asia. A Japanese student by the name of Shibasaburo Kitasato had experimented with the germ accountable for the plague and named it pasteurella pestis. This germ was found among the rodents (black rats) and probably spread by fleas which bit the humans (Byrne, Pg.16). In October of 1347, Italian merchants were sailing to the Black Sea from a trade route in China. The shipmates were struck by the plague and soon it had spread throughout Europe (The Middle Ages, 2006). Many scholars have suggested that merchants and army men had rats in grain sacks or fleas on clothing which is how the plague moved from the Silk Road to Europe (Byrne, Pg.6).
An individual who becomes diagnosed with this epidemic didn't live that long because there was no cure such as antibiotics until the 1940s. The first stage of the bubonic plague produced flu like symptoms following a high fever. In the second stage, black bulges (buboes) emerge near the armpit and black spots appear all over the hands and feet. Other symptoms include vomiting, diarrhea, and coughing up blood. Reports showed that there were some individuals who developed the buboes internally and can only be seen after an autopsy. The third and most devastating stage takes form of pneumonia; the patients die within a week (2001, Cantor, Pg.12). In an essay on the pestilence, author Al-Wardi had quoted "There the plague sat like...

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