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Old 11-13-2005, 10:58 PM   #1
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The Black Death

Hi wondering if ne one knew some info on the plague the spread over europe during the 1300s. I know the basics, where it spread, but I was wondering what POV I could tell this story from and some keys facts that would help in the creation process
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Old 11-14-2005, 01:59 AM   #2
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it spread from rats and rat-fleas (some type of flea, i duno what it is), dead bodies and trash-like things, thats about all i really know
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Old 11-14-2005, 02:26 AM   #3
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Sorry, I am quite knowledgeable about the plague that hit London in 1665, but don't know that much about the plague in the 14th century. Actually, there is not so much to know about it. If you know where and how it spread, and you can describe the symptons, that's about it.
The thing is to create a story in which this plague acts as a background. Make clear how your characters suffer because of it.



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Old 11-14-2005, 02:28 AM   #4
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I think this may help.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_black_death
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Old 11-22-2005, 07:41 PM   #5
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Luckily, I'm a biologist/biochemist The "Black Plague", Black Death, or Bulbonic Plague, is transmitted from rats, to fleas, and back & forth... then to Humans via the fleas. Fleas are the carrier. Without a rat infestation, the disease never really gets a foothold. Without fleas to carry it, it never gets transmittted. The bacteria is Yersinia pestis

Bad sanitation in the middile ages allowed it to manifest via a rat infestation first, then all the fleas that came along with the rats. It quickly passed to Humans where it was transmitted by aerosol & contact - much like influenza (cold & flu). It's mostly inactive in fleas because their body temperature is too low (cold-blooded). The bacterium is then "active" in humans with a warm enough body temperature to support it's full growth & reproduction. (and rats & other mammals).

Couple days, maybe a week, flu-like symptoms: fever or chills, headaches, aches, etc. The lymph nodes can swell to the size of golf balls, or much larger even (from their usual pea size). The bacterium multiplies and fills the blood stream, clogging it, choking blood supply and causing massive internal & external hemorraging, and grotesque, necrotic skin lesions. It fills, clogs, and ruptures the lungs as well, giving pneumonia-like symptoms.

In contrast to the usual horror stories you hear about it, the mortality rate is only about 30%. "Only" ...being still over 30 million people dead in Europe at the time. With good treatment and early enough detection, nearly everyone recovers fully, though, nowadays.

That said... that is the wild/natural form of the bacteria. Much, much... much more infectious and deadly forms were produced in biological weapons labs around the world...

...wild animal populations with Plague still exist today... worldwide except in Europe & Australia/NZ, and inside the artic circle (alaska, N Canda, N Siberia).
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Old 11-22-2005, 09:32 PM   #6
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http://www.channel4.com/history/micr...e/findout.html

I went looking for the author to a book I read on the subject of the Black death and found this handy site with a bunch of books and information listed.

The book I was looking for was Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Years which this site says has been revealed for a work of fiction. However, from what I remember of it, it gives a good overview of people and their reactions to the plague--even though they are all fictional. It may give you some ideas anyways.
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