Summary of the plague - also known as black death - is one of the most devastating contagious diseases humans have ever encountered. In the mid-1300s, attacking Asia and Europe, about one-third of the population died (75-200 million people). In the 1300's there was never been the same magnitude as the world, but the plague still exists today, occurred in a remote village in Madagascar at the end of 2013, and 100 people died. Man
The plague lasted for 1665-1666, the last major epidemic of British plague. It occurred in the second pandemic for hundreds of years, a long-lasting intermittent plague epidemic began in China in the first year of black death in 1331, and the occurrence included other forms . Like a pulmonary plague, and continued until 1750. In the winter of 1664, a bright comet could be seen in the sky, and the people in London felt afraid and wanted to know the wrong thing it took. London consisted of 448 acres of walls surrounded by walls, originally designed to block attack zones. Ludgate, Newgate, Aldersgate, Cripplegate, Moorgate, Bishopsgate all have a gate to the south and a Thames and a London Bridge to the south. In poor urban areas, it is impossible to maintain hygiene with an overcrowded house or loft
In the Middle Ages, the occurrence of glandular plague repeatedly destroyed the population of Europe. The great plague (1665 - 66) was the last major epidemic in London. With that outbreak, an estimated 100,000 deaths corresponded to about 15% of the city's population at that time. As the number of victims begins to increase, the burial ground will be in a competent state and a hole will be drilled to accommodate the dead. These biggest ones are in Aldogate, where it is estimated that more than 1,000 plague victims are buried in anonymous pits.
It is a phenomenon in historical European textbooks to compare destruction and destruction by AIDS epidemics and medieval plague 'Black Death'. An unstoppable plague attacked all continents of Europe and occupied 80% of the population of Europe (Forsythe). Today, the world is full of deadly diseases. The epidemic of AIDS remains incurable. - Comparison and Comparison Mining and Followers In this article I will quote and describe two poems written by Seamus Heaney. The two poems I write will be in sharp contrast to the childhood of his rural village. When we want to follow the footsteps of my father, we will bring us back to the cypress.