Social and Economic Consequences of the Bubonic Plague
Social and Economic Consequences of the Bubonic Plague Black Death
Bubonic Plague—Black Death Cause Carried by flea infected rodents A Genoese ship transported the disease from Caffa on the Black Sea to Messina in Sicily. It is called the Black Death because of the swelling in the lymph nodes. Yersinia Pestis was the type of bacteria that caused the Black Death. It was not discovered until 1894 by Alexandre Yersin, Swiss/French physician and bacteriologist.
Bubonic Plague—Black Death Location and History Crimean Peninsula Crimean War 1853 -1856 read about two famous nurses Mary Seacole and Florence Nightingale. Conference at Yalta, February 1945, and the most recent news on the Crimean Peninsula Ukrainian Crisis Caffa Sicily Conquered by a number of groups Greeks, Arabs and Normans Sicily was also involved in the Punic Wars and as a strategic point during World War II