Bubonic Plague: The Black Death In The Middle Ages

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Imagine being a perfectly fit and healthy person and while asleep you die. Back in the Middle Ages the Black Death, Bubonic Plague, was one of the most horrific pandemic in the entire history. In the span of five years it killed over 20 millions people. Although the Black Plague was a devastating event at the time, there were some from this medical and social catastrophe. Because of the Bubonic Plague the human population evolved, changes in the medical practice occurred, and feudalism came to an end.
After the events of the Black Death the population evolved. Larry Jimenez writes in his studies,” Europeans who survived the plague had their genes altered to make them more resistant to disease” (Listverse). Sometime after the Plague, Europeans started to responded to disorders and disease differently. After analysis of skeletal remains was done it was concluded that, “Before the Plague, only 10 percent of the population could expect to live past 70; post-plague, that figure had risen to 20 percent” (Listverse). After the plague, people had a higher chance at living. Not only did genes changing for the European, but medical practice as well.
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Before the Black Death, “Hospitals were simply places where the sick were isolated so they would not infect others” (Listverse). They didn't know how to treat an ill person, so they just contained they all in one place. Since traditional medicine don't stop the plague, new techniques, and medicines were being thought of. Medicine wasn't thought as, “theoretical and text-bound” but became, “observational and practical” (Listverse). Hospital became more aware of the different types of illnesses and committed to treat them. The malpractice of medicine came to an end, just like feudalism