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  1. It focuses on the case of the Justinianic Plague (ca. 541–750 c.e.), the first major recorded plague pandemic in Mediterranean history, which has increasingly been used to explain significant demographic, political, social, economic, and cultural change during late antiquity (ca. 300–800 c.e.).

  2. 5 lip 2023 · Plague is a contagious disease caused by the zoonotic bacteria, (Yersinia pestis) but transmitted by fleas. It is found on rodents and their fleas. The most common ways for humans to contract...

  3. 9 gru 2020 · PDF | The Gram-negative bacterium Yersinia pestis is responsible for deadly plague, a zoonotic disease established in stable foci in the Americas,... | Find, read and cite all the research you...

  4. 7 sie 2023 · Plague is a zoonotic infection that has affected humans for thousands of years. In humans, the primary plague syndromes are bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic. All of these result from infection with the gram-negative bacillus Yersinia pestis.

  5. The Wars of the Roses were not one long war fought by two implacably opposed families. It’s far more interesting than that, a series of partially-linked but quite distinct phases of warfare that broke out despite efforts at almost every stage to avoid fighting.

  6. 17 lip 2021 · It is also established that the plague reflects the cholera epidemic that ravaged Oran in 1949 as well as past and present plagues/human suffering and pains like World War II and COVID-19.

  7. Our study material will tell us briefly about the War of the Roses, a civil war in England that lasted from 1455-1487. In this module we will learn about: England in the Fifteenth Century, its people, with an emphasis on the structures of society.

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