0 a very infectious disease spread by rats, causing swelling, fever, and usually death. In the 14th century it killed half the people living in Europe.
He wrote a very clear account of the epidemic, which leaves no doubt that it was true bubonic plague.
It carried fever-patients for the hospital at Genoa, ill of the bubonic plague.
No precautions that sanitary science can suggest have been omitted, yet the weekly reports now show an average of twenty thousand deaths from the bubonic plague alone.
She killed rats by the hundreds of thousands, rat-proofed her buildings, and thus, at one stroke, eliminated all fear of bubonic plague.
The bubonic plague prevails there with a frightful mortality.
All patients were treated just after the clinical diagnosis of plague (bubonic plague with cervical, inguinal or axillary buboes) and all patients recovered subsequently.
The non-literary numismatic, legal, and papyrological evidence can thus be seen to concur with the testimony of our contemporary eyewitness accounts for the late-antique bubonic plague.
We have practically conquered cholera, and what have we done against bubonic plague?