
Bloody England Elizabeth and Mary
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Contents
Bloody Queens | Elizabeth and Mary (2016) BBC Documentary 57:”14
The Last Days Of Mary Queen of Scots - BBC History Documentary 44:55
Henry & Anne. The Lovers Who Changed History. Part 1 45:00
Henry & Anne. The Lovers Who Changed History. Part 2 45:05
History of the Kings and Queens of England 4:35:01
The French Revolution 1:30:17
Witch Hunt: A Century of Murder Episode 1 & 2 1:29:43
The Wars of The Roses: A Bloody Crown 2:07:42
Castles: The Magnificence Of the Medieval Era - History Documentary Films 42:54
History of French Revolution and Napoleon 43:23
Justinian Plague [TEXT]
List of epidemics
Plague of Athens 429-426BC
Plague
of Athens 429–426 BC 75,000–100,000
Antonine Plague 165–180 AD, also known as the Plague of Galen
Antonine Plague Europe, Asia & Northern Africa 165–180
5 million; 30% of population
Plague of Justinian 541-542 Byzantine Empire & Sassanid Empire
Plague of Justinian 541-542 Europe 25–50
million; 40% of population plague
Black Death Europe 1346–1350
Black Death 1346–1350
75–100 million; 30–60% of population plague
Cocliztli Mexico 1545–1548 viral hemorrhagic fever
Cocoliztli 1545–1548 5–15 million (80% of population) viral hemorrhagic fever
1576 Cocoliztli epidemic Mexico
Cocoliztli epidemic 1576 Mexico The cause of the epidemic
remains unknown though it might have been an indigenous viral hemorrhagic fever, perhaps
exacerbated by the worst droughts to affect that region in 500 years and living
conditions for indigenous peoples of Mexico in
the wake of European invasion.[1] Some
historians have suggested it was typhus, measles,
or smallpox,
though the symptoms did not match
Plague is an infectious disease that is caused by
the bacterium Yersinia
pestis. Depending on lung infection, or sanitary
conditions, plague can be spread in the air, by direct contact, or very
rarely by contaminated undercooked food. The symptoms of plague depend on the
concentrated areas of infection in each person: bubonic
plague in lymph nodes,septicemic
plague in blood vessels, pneumonic
plague in lungs. It is treatable if detected early. Plague is
still relatively common in some remote parts
of the world.
√The Dark Ages 1:30:39
The economy was stagnated, the people depended on
agriculture and herding like they did a thousand years before. Roads were in
disrepair, people were isolated living near the forest. In the “Dark Ages”
people had no work patterns; they often went months without doing anything only
to become overwhelmed by activity in the planting season. Half of your children
would have died before they reached adolescence, a quarter of newborns died in
their first year of life.
Bede was an English monk
at the monastery of Saint Peter at Monkwearmouthand
its companion monastery, Saint Paul's, in modern Jarrow (see Monkwearmouth-Jarrow), Tyne
and Wear, both of which were then in the Kingdom of
Northumbria. He is well known as an author and scholar, and his most famous
work, Historia ecclesiastica gentis
Anglorum (The Ecclesiastical History of the English People)
gained him the title "The Father of English History".
Bede was moreover a skilled linguist and translator,
and his work made the Latin and Greek writings
of the early Church Fathers much more accessible to his
fellow Anglo-Saxons, contributing significantly to
English Christianity. Bede's monastery had access to an
impressive library which included works by Eusebius and Orosius, among
many others.