Origins and Arrival in Europe

The Black Death was caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, which primarily spread through fleas carried by rats. The disease originated in Central Asia — most likely in the steppe regions of what is now Kazakhstan — and spread westward along the Silk Road trade routes in the 1340s. By 1346 it had reached the Black Sea ports of the Crimea, where Genoese merchants were trading.

According to contemporary accounts, the Mongol forces besieging the Genoese trading post of Caffa catapulted plague-infected corpses over the city walls — one of the earliest recorded instances of biological warfare. The Genoese traders fled by ship to Sicily and Italy, carrying the infection with them. By 1347 the plague had reached Sicily, Sardinia and southern Italy. By 1348 it had spread through France, Spain, England and Germany. By 1351 it had reached Scandinavia and Russia. No part of Europe was spared.

Scale of the Catastrophe

According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, the Black Death killed an estimated 25 to 50 million people in Europe between 1347 and 1351 — approximately 30 to 60 percent of the European population. Some regions were hit harder than others: Florence lost perhaps 60 percent of its population, and some rural areas were completely depopulated.

How the Plague Spread

The Black Death manifested in three main forms. Bubonic plague — the most common — was characterised by the swelling of lymph nodes (called buboes, which gave the plague its common name) in the groin, armpits and neck. Without modern antibiotics, bubonic plague killed approximately 30 to 75 percent of those infected within days. Septicaemic plague, which infected the bloodstream directly, was almost always fatal. Pneumonic plague, which spread through respiratory droplets, was effectively 100 percent fatal if untreated and could spread without flea contact at all.

Medieval medicine had no understanding of germ theory. Physicians attributed the plague to bad air (miasma), planetary alignments and divine punishment. Treatments ranged from bloodletting and herb-burning to the application of dried toads to buboes. None were effective. The most successful prevention — quarantine, from the Italian quarantina meaning forty days — was developed in Venice in the 1370s and remains in use today.

The Social Collapse

The psychological and social impact of the Black Death was as devastating as the physical toll. Communities collapsed as people fled, abandoning the sick and dying. The Church, which had promised that prayer and piety would be rewarded, found its authority shattered when priests died alongside their congregations at the same rate. Many clergy fled rather than minister to the dying, causing lasting damage to ecclesiastical credibility.

Trade networks disintegrated as cities shut their gates. Agricultural production collapsed as peasants died in the fields. Entire villages were wiped out — in England alone, it is estimated that around 1,000 villages were abandoned during or after the plague years, many never to be resettled. The resulting depopulation would reshape European geography for centuries.

The Flagellant movement emerged — processions of believers who whipped themselves publicly as penance, believing the plague was divine punishment for human sin. The movement spread rapidly across Germany and the Low Countries before being suppressed by Pope Clement VI. Jews were blamed in many communities and subjected to mass violence and expulsion, with entire Jewish communities massacred across the Rhine valley in 1349 despite the Pope's explicit condemnation of the persecution.

Timeline of the Black Death

1346

Reaches Black Sea ports

Plague arrives at Genoese trading posts in Crimea via Central Asian trade routes.

1347

Enters Western Europe

Genoese ships carry the plague to Sicily and southern Italy. The disease spreads rapidly northward.

1348

Peak of mortality

France, Spain and England ravaged. Florence loses an estimated 60% of its population.

1349

Northern Europe

Germany, Scandinavia and the Low Countries affected. Jewish communities massacred across the Rhine valley.

1351

Russia reached

The plague completes its sweep of Europe. Recurring outbreaks continue for centuries.

The Economic Consequences

The mass death of the Black Death had paradoxical economic consequences. In the short term it was catastrophic — trade collapsed, agricultural production fell and many industries were decimated. But the surviving population inherited the land and resources of the dead. Labour became scarce, which gave surviving peasants — for the first time — genuine bargaining power over their lords.

The feudal system, already under strain, was fatally weakened by the Black Death. Peasants who survived found they could demand higher wages, better conditions and freedom of movement in ways that had been impossible before. The Peasants' Revolt in England in 1381 — while unsuccessful — reflected this new assertiveness. Historians broadly agree that the Black Death accelerated the decline of feudalism in Western Europe by a century or more.

The economic disruption also reshaped patterns of trade and investment. The demand for labour-saving devices increased. Investment in technology — mechanised mills, improved agricultural tools — grew as landowners sought ways to produce more with fewer workers. Some historians see this as one of the catalysts for the technological innovation that would eventually produce the Renaissance and the Scientific Revolution.

The Legacy of the Black Death

The Black Death's legacy is visible in almost every aspect of modern Western civilisation. The weakening of Church authority contributed to the conditions that produced the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century. The disruption of the established social order created new social mobility that helped fuel the Renaissance. The development of quarantine in response to the plague established the foundational principle of modern public health practice.

The plague also returned repeatedly. Europe suffered major outbreaks in 1361, 1369 and at irregular intervals thereafter. The Great Plague of London in 1665 — 300 years after the Black Death — killed approximately 100,000 people, roughly a quarter of London's population. The third pandemic of bubonic plague, which began in China in 1855 and spread globally via steamship routes, killed around 12 million people in India alone.

The bacterium Yersinia pestis still exists. Modern plague is treatable with antibiotics and occurs in small clusters primarily in Central Asia, Africa and the American Southwest. But the conditions that allowed the Black Death — a globally connected trade network, dense urban populations and no medical understanding of infectious disease — have clear parallels in the modern world, as the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020-2022 made vividly clear.

For more on historical pandemics see our articles on Smallpox and the Spanish Flu of 1918.

"So many died that all believed it was the end of the world." — Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron, written during the Florence outbreak of 1348
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