One of the most important effects of black death against Western Europe is the change in relations between humans and the church, as it can not effectively deal with black death. After the plague occurred in 1347, people sought an answer to the Catholic church which operated society in the Middle Ages. A few years later, the church failed to respond effectively to this epidemic, formally forming a sect which declared himself from the church.
Introduction: The epidemic of black death in the 14th century is one of the most famous and historically occurring diseases. The plague by Yersinia Pestis may have occurred in Mongolian grassland around 1331. By 1353, the plague spread to most parts of Europe, Asia, North Africa, and in some areas the death rate reached 75%. Middle East and European medical experts are not ready to deal with such a serious epidemic. The doctors at the time relied on medical technology and theory going back to Aristotle and Hippocrates in the 4th century BC. Many people have tried it, but the doctor has no real way to heal or prevent it. For religious reasons, medical causes such as humor theory and spread of plague were proposed to explain the plague
The most notorious is Black Death, a medieval epidemic that struck Asia and Europe. It is estimated that it reached Europe in the late 1340s and 25 million people died. The deaths of blacks have been destroyed in the city, especially in the centuries. The outbreak involved the London epidemic (1665-66), where one in five people died. According to ancient historians, the first well-documented pandemic was the epidemic of the Justinian that began in the year 541 AD, which was named after Byzantine Emperor Justinian I at Constantinople (Turkey). Istanbul kills 10,000 people every day. Modern estimates show that half of the European population has disappeared before the plague disappears in the 1970s.