The Black Death of the Late Middle Ages (1) PDF
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Uploaded by HappyInsight
Nissin
2023
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Summary
This document is a class agenda for a lesson on the Black Death in the late Middle Ages. The agenda includes a warm-up question, learning objective, essential questions, and homework assignment on the Black Death. It also discusses the Black Death in detail, covering its causes, spread, and effects on Europe.
Full Transcript
The Black Plague Class Agenda for November 7, 2023 1. Warm-up Question and some responses 2. Learning Objective: SWBAT understand how Europe changed after 1347 when the Black Death wiped out up to ½ of Europe 3. Essential Question: How did the events of the late middle ages cause Europe to change...
The Black Plague Class Agenda for November 7, 2023 1. Warm-up Question and some responses 2. Learning Objective: SWBAT understand how Europe changed after 1347 when the Black Death wiped out up to ½ of Europe 3. Essential Question: How did the events of the late middle ages cause Europe to change 4. Discuss the Late Middle Ages 5. Homework: Please read the attached reading about The Black Death or the Plague on Schoology (no summary) 6. Exit ticket The Black Death - Around 30-60% of Europe died from the plague from 1346-1350s. It didn’t affect populations of other continents as badly ● The Black Plague spread from central Asia along the Silk Road, from the fleas living on the black rats that traveled on merchant ships and by the Mongols ● The Mongols were carrying the plague when they attacked an Italian trading station in the Crimea, in 1346, ● The plague broke out on both sides ● When the Italian merchants fled on their ships, they carried the Black Plague with them, ● What caused it? corrupted air? decaying unburied bodies? poor sanitation? Evil spirits? widespread sin? Minorities? After 1350, a culture of death-themed art of pessimism, and contemporary art turned dark: La Danse Macabre, or the dance of death ● How short and vain life is, some questioned their faith - Where was god during this? - Why didn’t he help us? The Plague actually helped the surviving peasants in England and Western Europe. - Increased social mobility, because of depopulation (30-60% of population had died) - Less obligation for families to stay on lands of the lords, and - Abandoned lands and high wages eventually brought an end to feudalism in Western Europe. - The peasants’ demands for higher wages and the aristocracy’s power to stop this progression caused rebellions; The Peasants Revolt of 1381 1350-1500 in England 1300 villages deserted - Social mobility was a reality. - New labor-saving technologies created higher productivity. - A shift from grain farming to animal husbandry. Grain farming required more labor than animal husbandry did. The Plague changed the social, political, and religious aspects of life for all - It helped bring in the Renaissance