How Did Bubonic Plague (Black Death) Actually End?
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- Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
- The death toll from the Bubonic plague was so high nearly a thrid of the world's population was wiped out from the deadly disease. But how did the Black Plague end and the world go back to normal? Check out today's new video as we go in time and find out what cause this deadly plague to disappear.
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I did a paper on the plague in high school. There are actually three types, pneumonic, bubonic, and septicemic, affecting the lungs, the lymph nodes, and the blood.
this scared me because my lymph nodes are swollen in the back of my neck .
@@kaiiloe get well soon kaii godbless
thank you for the info very informative :)
Isn’t there a fourth one?
@@kimmoreels7950 aww ty , im sad i didnt see this earlier 🤍 . I’m getting better :)
This man throwing shade so hard he turned the day into night.
wHoAhHH
Hi
😂🤣gotta use this one day
Don't worry I will give you credit if I quoted in the text message I'm just going to say some guy from RUclips😃😃
I subscribed to your channel
we meet again thunderwolf
“The Black Death killed a higher proportion of the world population than any other singular event in history”
The music:🥳😄😁
this had no right being so funny!
LOL
That’s not true . Covid 19 did . 🤭
@@nocap22 that's not true, but okay.
This music is literally from Halo 5 lol
Bruh imagine how scary it was living in this time. People not knowing anything and just dying. 1 out of 3 people died to the plague.
"no we gotta bump those numbers up those are rookie numbers"
didn't he say 80% of people? 4/5
@@waffles87 80% death rate for those infected. Not everyone got infected
@@nickowen7406 no certain variants of the plague had 100% death rate
"In a situation that would thankfully never be repeated again"
I had to check the date to see if the irony was intentional
It wasn’t repeated tho covid ain’t even that bad yes it’s still serve but the Black Death was much much much worse you have a 99.4% chance of survival if your in the age range of 11-29 that is if you don’t smoke and don’t drink too much and have a average immune system
@@magicalseal8710 Covid is cute compared to the plague lol
You seen many covid dead bodies in the street 🤪🤪
@@ellepant lol
@@MikadoYuma come to India and explain that to me
One thing it always amazes me to think about is if you are of European descent, all of YOUR direct ancestors (both adults and children) SURVIVED the plague long enough to have children themselves.
Or Asian.
@@plkrtn did the bubonic plague came to asia?
It started there 💀in Asia lol
@@ieatriceveryday It actually started in Asia lol
Hehe english resilience go brrr
Covid when it meets the black plague: im such a huge fan
FR
@Notepad Gaming amongus
@@dr.aza-2236 amogus
Lol
Fr 😭😭
I’ve always had an odd fascination with the Black Death. You gave us a lot of information in a very entertaining way. Great job!
In 2020, instead of flying cars, we were re-teaching people and reminding them to.. wash their hands
@@chrisg2281
Couldn’t agree more
@@chrisg2281 Great Scott!
@The Plan man, people are really dumb
Still trying to teach Americans that the earth is older than 6,000 years and public health precautions are not a giant conspiracy against their “freedoms”, it’s exhausting
@@quantumrobin4627 exactly , I hate people that think for themselves don’t believe the experts and mainstream media like us
It amazes me how they can make so much content from the same topic
Tbf there's are historians whose entire careers are focused on the black death so yah
Yea lol
It’s happening in my area right now, they call it black fungus
If you pick things apart and find the smallest details you can do anything
@@TheBestLife2184 aight
People with fever, nausea, vomiting, joint pain in 1340: I have the plague
People with headache in 2021: I have the plague
People with nothing in 2050: "I have plague"
@@storageunit2683 People getting healthier in 2100 : "I have the plague"
Give it time.
@@nitusingh393 people in 2250 getting superpowers: I think I got the plague
@@imikfunartsproductions7444 people in 3000 getting immortal I have the plaque
"In a situation that would never be repeated again, they just went about their business hoping the problem would fix itself before really affecting them." Why has no one commented on this?
Cause people that feel the need to repeat a sentence from a video less than a minute in are normally a few sandwiches short of a picnic.
@@stonedpaladin8632 Not when it's funny and very appropriate for today's current events. Also, few sandwiches short of a picnic. Never heard that one before. I'm stealing it.
Well I have
@Baylon frisbee witch would be funny to watch in Minecraft
Because that's the real cure and sheep love drama.
"never have to worry about a pandemic tearing through the world again..." painfully ironic😂
Corona 99.98% survival , black plague 80% death sure weigh up on the scale 🤯
They didnt say anything about a PLANdemic
It’s not as bad as the bubonic plague
But this was made during the pandemic
@Airbus A350 Kung flu measles
After watching this video COVID doesn’t seem that bad anymore
That still doesn’t mean we don’t take covid seriously
It's not. 97% survival rate, 95% of the 3% fatalities are 60+ years old with pre existing health conditions. 80+ year olds make up over 60% of all covid fatalities. Not saying it's not real or that we shouldn't be cautious but it seems like it's been blown a bit out of proportion.
Because it's not
Because COVID isn't that bad
@@BinksyyMusic ye it should be taken seriously but just comparing it with similar events in history it is not as bad
This guy keeps me company when I’m constipated
Toilet bros🤘
dude me too
Drink water and fast
Mines runny and smells like rotten egg
Toilet
Interesting that I’ve never heard of that version of the nursery rhyme. Where I’m from we called it “Ring around the rosey” and each line is a reference to the plague. “Ring around the rosey” (A red spot or ring would develop before the blisters) “pocket full of posey” (the pockets of victims were stuffed with or covered with flowers to reduce the smell before they could be dealt with) “ashes, ashes, we all fall down” (refers to the practice of mass cremation which was discovered to help limit the spread of the disease)
i learned this too while in school
"The disease killed so many people so quickly that it run out of victims". This made me laugh.
I wondered how it felt to know that you survived because not even a plague decided to choose you to be it’s victim
@@XCHDragox115 LOOOOOL
Not funny:/
@@s1kicks very funny
We’ve been lockdown for so many times, that we basically lost our humor..
It’s actually insane how quick it spread considering the method of transportation back then
It's actually not that surprising. Ships went to various ports across the continent, so the disease always had multiple points of entry. A few people tried to be careful and tried to turn the ships away but not everyone was that diligent. The ships were still coming in somewhere because as the main way of transportation at the time, sailors and merchants couldn't avoid to have the shipment of goods delayed. Even a small delay risked a huge financial burden if they didn't have anything to sell. People needed what was on those ships and a lot of people wouldn't care to be even somewhat careful over the state the sailors were coming in and they were wheezing near death.
As this video also said, no one knew the disease actually spread through fleas on rats, so even if some ports turned away ships, it was too late, and the rats already made their way through land. Given how bad rats breed, you have thousands of rats across a country with the fleas containing the disease. And you have several rats that are able to make it on ships, which didn't have the best sanitation standards, which led to more rats going on the ships, the disease spreading, and more ships dropping on land to continue spreading the disease and the rats that had the disease. It was a vicious cycle no one knew how to stop. It's actually more sad that in 2020, we were ill prepared to deal with another huge pandemic for a lot of similar reasons.
Also take into consideration that, when compared to today's standards, it didn't actually spread that quickly. It took around 5 - 6 years to spread throughout Europa and other parts of the world. In comparison, COVID 19 only took a few months. Also, there where numerous instances of the bubonic plague, in the span of decades, which could have settled the disease little by little in other parts of the world, until it finally had a major outbreak.
@@Emmanuel_Rocha
Back then when people wash their hands and stayed in their home to not spread the plague
While people can't even wear a simple mask these days
Rats and fleas.
If you consider that the Spanish or the Napolitan disease that killed millions in Europe around 1560 was a syphilis' epidemic.... They really knew how to travel, and with the lack of electricity, radio and TV, they really had to find other things to do and other ways to relate to your neighbors...🤪😅😅
Moral in the old times
..there it goes....
"Unless Gwyneth Paltrow is your medical professional, we generally expect better medical advice"
*OOF*
I CHOKEDDDD
Well, it's true. She's a snakeoil saleman
Didn't she suffer from long-term COVID symptoms???
P.S. warning: don't smell her candles.
I choked on my own laugh
This is absolutely why we need to take the situation of antibiotic resistance very seriously.
*Alternate Title: How The Black Death Met Its Own Death!*
LOL
*its
Hyuk hyuk hyuk
It's still alive but it's classifed as Safe now it use to be Apollyon that time and almost cause the End of Humanity Senerico
I FOUND.A PENNY
So when humanity was beheading its fellows, burning "witches" at the stake, and in general being savages, the black plague stepped in and said, "Hold my beer."
😂
humans were always savages we still are today.
european ppl*
Wow, your so unoriginal. Hold my beer joke got OLD 2+, years ago.
@@Straightjacket154 Some people just look for the negative in everything. Always someone that just has to start off with something to argue about. Looks like you're one of them. Miserable life maybe?
funny thing is I'm actually learning this in my social studies class now, couldn't have been a better time
Same
Same 7th grade?
Check out thoughty2’s video on this as well...
@@alexrao6098 yep
Same
I can’t wait to see the video that says “how COVID ended” in a year or two
It's going at lease for 5 more years
but people would know how covid ended if it's only a year or two
@@SnoBlobber yes
Like its going to happen-
@@bunny-wv8iz man i really hope it fades away.
People back in the time: "Jesus would have killed a large amount of people! especially Jewish people"
Jesus: **is Jewish**
Thank you!!
Finally someone who know, it like hardly anyone who is not Jewish knows this. I only know bc I have Jewish
It's also told that Jesus was a Muslim and a Christian in Islam and Christianity respectively so who to believe? All 3 of these religions claim that Jesus was apart of them and no the others oh well
@@ehwhynot9384 Okay I can see how people would say he is Muslim but Christian? He himself wasnt Christian but the people who follow him are as they made in through him but that doesnt change the fact that he isnt Christian
Its kinda like how lord Buddha is a Hindu but his followers are Buddhist as they made a religion his practices
@@ehwhynot9384 Jesus being a Christian got a good laugh out of me, man's literally following his own religion
I hope one day in the future someone else makes a video like
"How did the Corona Pandemic end" lol
Edit wtf: So many Americans in the replies explaining that covid isn't real and is a whole conspiracy... You do realise that people like us live in places that exist in other parts of the world too, where we see terrible conditions and many many people dying because of poor handling by our governments?
no need, answer: the human immune system
@@Simon-talks vaccine
@@omaralqau9008 human immune system. The virus rate was already falling before the vaccine and if the vaccine was so effective big Pharma wouldn’t tell you to have to get repeated vaccinations over and over and over again or that you cannot get sick again..... there’s a reason why the overwhelming majority of society never got sick. Our immune systems killed the virus(as the sole purpose of immune systems are designed by the body to do). I personally have not been sick of anything in over five years.
@@Simon-talks are you implementing that you are an anti vax sir
@@omaralqau9008 nope. I’m pro healthy lifestyle and pro decision. Are you implicating that you don’t believe a healthy lifestyle is important when it comes to health and that you are pro drugs and surgery for everything, while eating McDonald’s and drinking Mountain Dew and not exercising?
The music is way too happy and inspirational for the topic of this video
what name music on this video? Please i need answer.
I remember the words being, “Ring around the Rosie! Pocket full of posies! Ashes, ashes, we all fall down!” I’m not sure where that came from, but that’s how it was sang when I was little..
Laughed way too hard when Gwyneth Paltrow showed up:”Goop goop goooop goop goopgoop….!”
me too lol
I remember it as “ ring around the rosies. Pocket full of Posey’s. Ashes ashes we all fall down”
I remember in 3rd grade when someone told me what it actually meant
Man kids are insane. I can confirm because I am a kid(sorta)
🤷🇦🇺
fun fact: did u know more people die from pigs than from sharks!!?? i will post regular videos like this so make sure to subscribe!
@@Flashisgreatfr Truth and it's getting worse. Look at the feral hog infestations Texas et al are having...
In the middle ages, pigs wandering into a cottage and eating the baby was a thing.
Love how the video was a low-key roast of Gwyneth Paltrow.
Corona: I’ve killed the most people
Black Plague: Hold my rats
“hold my bacteria”
7:03 for a brief moment you can see that there is no body of the guy, it appears only after a moment
YOOOOOO
misplaced render
I've heard another explanation not mentioned in this video.
What medics at the time saw, was that after the last outbreak in 1666, grand epidemics became ever rarer and then the single cases too disappeared. The development started in West Europe and went East, the last major epidemic in Russia was in the late 18th century. It looked something started up in West Europe during the late 17th century and spread east, something unfavourable to the disease.
Then it was noted that something happened with the rats of Europe during this time. The species black rat (Rattus rattus) vanished because it was outcompeted by the brown rat (Rattus norwegicus, it really is the scientific name), animal experiments has shown that these two species are inveterate enemies and when they meet the black rat will almost always come out worse.
Infected with the bacteria Yersinia pestis both species will fall ill. But now it shows that these two rat species are predominantly infected by two different flea species. While the black rat flea will bite any animal once hungry enough (because the bacteria is clogging its guts), the brown rat flea is unlikely to bite any animal other than other rodents.
Both species of rats come from the east. But while the black rat came to Europe during Roman times from the Middle East - and caused the Justinian plague paving the way for Slavonic and Moslem conquests - the brown rat came from southeast Asia when international trade on the high oceans began in earnest during the 17th century. And this maritime trade came to the western Europe first.
So the well-nigh eradication of black rats in Europe by brown rats taking over the ecological niche made grand scale epidemics impossible. Single epidemics of plague nowadays are found where there still are large populations of black rats, not in Europe that is but in India and Africa.
It’s funny to me how everything bad has to come or be from Africa. Until now the only decease that came from Africa was Ebola, every other decease or pandemic came either way from Europe or Asia. You might want to rethink about your reply’s.
Thank you kind sir. Your information was enlightening.
@@anoneofyabusiness9561 He didn't say it came from Africa, he said it still exists there because the rat is still alive there. Also it's disease.
@@anoneofyabusiness9561 Ebola was manufactured by scientists. They unleashed it on Africa. This one now, they unleased it upon the whole world. It too was man made.
@@michaelalbertson7457 I’m pretty sure COVID came from bats. You have sources to back up these claims?
I always thought the "pocketful of posies" was a way to deal with the stench of death everywhere.
you are correct. The words were "Ashes Ashes we all fall down" . Not Tissues tissues we all fall down
@@RUclips4me I came to the comments looking just for this lol. I was like uhhhh..I’m pretty sure it’s “ashes ashes” 😅
The Plague Doctor masks have different spices inside of what you breath through because they believed it kept them safer
It was - it states such in a different video created by the infographics show (a video about the origin of popular children's nursery rhymes)
@@RUclips4me ...I was taught 'A-tishoo A-tishoo [:sneezing] we all fall down'
Multiple versions are valid
Can’t imagine what everyone went through around that time.
we tend to overlook it, but i bet it was something straight out of a horror movie people. watching everyone around you slowly dying and then dying yourself. imagine walking through the abandoned villages with blackened and rotting bodies lining the streets and filling the homes. it must’ve been a horrific sight.
2:24 What a interesting conversation between couple.
What a interesting spell between internet
what a interesting spell between the internet
That "Entire point of their religion" part was funny. You can't have many jokes like that anymore, it feels
@Sunday Girl Yeah, over the course of about 20 years of the internet existing. You can't have many jokes like that anymore, even off the internet
@shannabits gaming and more archives True, Twitter is a large part of it. Lol
@@TweekLudwig yeah u can with Christianity beacuse that's not an opressed religion. Lol and they started so many bad things
@shannabits gaming and more archives incel vibes
@@saira9632 ur projecting...
"Bring out your dead!" ~ Monty Python. :)
That old man
They actually did this during the bubonic plague times! So many would die that people would start carrying around wagons, and others would start piling bodies in them. They took the bodies to either be burned or buried in mass graves. I can’t remember if they got paid for this or not
But I'm not dead
@@harrisonskelton6934
.... yet....
The killer rabbit is the reason behind the bubonic plaque
I didn't know that the Bubonic Plague was still around, I learned that literally today when I saw another video by Vice about the return of the Plague in Madagascar in 2013 when it killed multiple people in a isolated village. Very interesting video.
Read somewhere, in some country where it's still cold nowadays, the plague also paced through it, the dead they buried are not decomposed fully because of the cold soil. So still have the plague inside them, and can still be active if people dug them up. and let history repeat itself if it manages to spread again europe.
yep. there were two cases of Bubonic Plague in Santa Fe NM in 2017 and there was a lady who died of it in Albuquerque in 2015 or so.
And most Europeans and Americans cannot get it because of natural immunity passed down which some how he didn’t mention a single word of even though it was a key part of the bubonic plague dying out
I did a 12 page essay on the bubonic plague in senior year, and not once in my life have I heard Ring Around The Rosie sang that way in my life lol that threw me off for a second😂
🚑
Not tissues, but atti-choo: a sneeze which was said to be the beginning of the disease. I very much doubt tissues had been invented-people used washable handkerchiefs or their sleeve…
Another interesting chapter from the aftermath of the Black Death, was the flagellants. A group of so-called christians, who felt that they hadn't suffered enough, and that god would spare them from the plague if they simply suffered enough. So they marched from town to town in groups, whipping themselves on their own bare backs, to show to god that they were suffering.
It's also not true. That song wasn't around until the 18th century and scholars believe it had no connection to the plague.
Common British versions include:
Ring-a-ring o' roses,
A pocket full of posies,
A-tishoo! A-tishoo!
We all fall down.[3]
“in a situation that would never be repeated again, they kept going about their daily lives.” 💀
your normal life stopped? Mine never did lol
Well it didn't. Covid doesn't compare to the plague. People should stop being so dramatic. They have no idea how lucky they are.
@@FC-hj9ub still bad and has devastated many communities. Just because it didn’t affect you severely doesn’t mean it didn’t affect others
@@Brybizzle999 He just said it wasn’t comparable. For it to be comparable 3-5 billion people would have to die to COVID….
Alright! My day is made
I am amazed by how clearly this guy explains stuff. It only takes 9 minutes.
Amen! He didn't think it was necessary to go into the individual victims' life stories. The Black Plague was bad enough!
It never actually ended man, there's still infested creatures in Colorado alone. The prarie dogs are the sole reason we don't interact with much in the fields.
Yeah they said that in never really in video & still exist today but is easily treatable with meds
Squirrels at the Grand Canyon have it too.
seriously?i thought this disease dissapeared at all long time ago.Tell me how it works nowadays?and how to protect?
There was a kid that caught it , not too recently
@@radomirasrebracic574 Nope, it's still around, although treatable with Penicilin, it still causes gangrene of the hands and feet. The patient may be able to survive, but left disabled for a lifetime. So no, not something to not be scared about.
0:41 "A situation that thankfully would never be repeated again."
I see what you did there. 🤔
First
COVID 19 is a cute aesthetic compared to he Black Death
What he did there was make a true and factual statement. COVID-19 isn't anywhere near to being as deadly as the bubonic plague. Or the Spanish Flu, for that matter.
@@mattjack3983 What infographics was saying there was actually sarcasm. Because before that he had said that the people in Europe ignored the plague in other continents, hoping it wouldn’t come to them. That’s exactly what America did with COVID; ignored it, believing that it wouldn’t come to our doorstep and being unprepared when it did
@@mattjack3983 The narrator wasn't talking about the disease, but about the part right after: "people just went about their business hoping the problem would fix itself". Which is what we did this time too 🤦♂️
This man burned Gwyneth Paltrow while talking about the most tragic event in history, I tip my hat to you
I love that at the very beginning of this video they talk about how deadly the plague was while playing inspirational music in the background
Crazy how this channels pumps out so many high quality videos
The way I learned the nursery rhyme was “Ashes, ashes, we all fall down,” the ashes would refer to people being cremated as opposed to people needing tissues
Edit: It's pretty funny that this reply section has just turned into people saying how they learned it
In my primary school we said a tissue a tissue we all fall down
yeah i've never heard someone say tissues in the song before
We only said atissue atissue we all fall down not ashes
That's a myth
@@prettyclassyladyOG what are you referring to when you say “That’s a myth?”
The 'pocket full of posies' wasn't a talisman. It was to disguise the pervading smell of death and decomposition in the streets, a bit like wearing perfume.
actually, no. they believed that the plague was caused by bad smells and bad air so they believed that if they carried nice smells on them then the plague would avoid them.
compared to what we going through now... lol
I thought it was ring around the rosie, pocket full of posies, ashes, ashes, we all fall down... I distinctly remember the rhyme going like that
I never in my life heard it sang Tissue, Tissue?
I was raised on it's "ashes, ashes we all fall down "
Tf 🤷😂
A tissue a tissue we all fall down,meaning sneezing was the last symptom,then death.its always been a tissue,were you get ashes from,did they cremate people then throw there ashes over everyone 🤣🤣🤣
He said tissue was the original version. Then it changed to ashes during the US, USSR cold war when people were scared of a nuclear strike.
@@ellepant i always heard “ashes, ashes” as well. Was told it was to reference the fire of London.
@@vaymullins428 bro a tissue a tissue sounds forced asf
I always thought atisshoo atisshoo meant the sound you make when you sneeze lol not literally, 'a tissue'. Funny. But I did know it had to do with death.
"....as most students discover after freshman year in their college dorms." Haha..classic
Basically there was an 80% mortality rate and those that survived were able to develop immunity’s while re-populating.
"How did the Plague end?"
Madagascar: Am I a joke to you?
It’s interesting when reading/watching about pandemics that have happened before, most notably the Spanish flu and the bubonic plague, how there starts to be trends. For example the closing of stores and churches, and the instinct to isolate the sick and move away from them, even though that plan could have failed. A lot of what happened during past pandemics especially the Spanish flu are happening again today, isolation, quarantine, closing of business to name a few.
**Bubonic Plague: failed at killing the human race**
*Covid-19: "fine, I'll do it myself"*
u compare a flue with a really deadly virus
Covid-19 will fail. The human race is strong.
Bubonic plague: "I killed a quarter of the worlds population. You have a 0.2% mortality rate. Sit the F down, kid."
@@7415_Gamer pfft
@@gerdmiller7996 my uncle died
“However in a situation that would never be repeated again, they just kept going on about their business hoping the problem would fix itself before it really affected them”
Oh…
“So how did they get rid of the Black Plague? You know, just asking for a friend.”
The Black Death is not the same as COVID
"never have to worry about a pandemic tearing through the world again" I think this video is from a parallel universe
The universe is called sarcasm I believe
If we use the classic definition of pandemic, then, covid isnt. They had do change to definition of a pandemic to be able to call covid a pandemic
Well so you do not understand the universal laguage of sarcasm
The people that say, “they survived the horrific COVID pandemic” and its horrendous 99% survivability rate 🤦🏻♂️😒😂
99% with medical intervention.
@Lady Joker if you need to go to the hospital because of COVID then you would have died if you didn’t go. Just look at what’s happening in India because they can’t keep up with the number of patients
@@the7311 no. People go to the hospital because they think they have covid and are afraid they will die. Many of whom dont have covid. And those who go to the hospital who have covid just need to rest and they recover fine.
So hospital attendance does not mean they will die without it
@@HowTwo007 so you’re telling me that the people that are on ventilators would have been fine without medical intervention?
"We won't have a pandemic again" 2019 " oh really that's what you think"
It’s “Atichoo”, Atichoo”. Not tissue, it refers to the sound of a sneeze. There were no such things as tissues in the 14th century.
You sure about that? I thought it was the sound of a sneeze too
@@prahalord yes definitely sound of a sneeze
Same, I always thought it was the sound of a sneeze, but some people in the comments are saying it says 'ashes, ashes, we all fall down'
This just popped up in my RUclips feed and it's crazy because I just read that a 10 year old in Colorado died of the plague this week.
I live in Arizona. Desert squirrels have been found with Bubonic Plague here. Its still around.
Yeah I’m moving now
I learned "ring around the rosie, pockets full of posies, ashes, ashes, and we all fall down" and I was taught that pockets full of posies represented how plague doctors would put flowers in their mask to hide the smell of rotting corpses and that ashes, ashes was meant to represents how the corpses of plague victims were burned
Ring around the rosies (Which everyone skips over explaining) represents the pustules that would form on the skin, esp in the nether regions. Your Rosies.
Ring around the rosies (Which everyone skips over explaining) represents the pustules that would form on the skin, esp in the nether regions. Your Rosies.
I always wondered about this and had trouble getting a complete summary of the Black Death. This is excellent. So the Bubonic Plague still exists but it is a less deadly form of the bacteria that occurred in the past.
Plus we have the medicine to cure it
Imagine covid being introduced like this in the future
Will u shut up man?
@@varunjain6688 why u mad
@@varunjain6688 why did he need to shut up? im curious.
@@varunjain6688 ???
@@varunjain6688 you good man? what’s wrong
Ummm I and my friends in the early 90's late 80's would say we all fall down dead at the end of the nursery rhyme.
Hey.........leave one standing upright to be our ancestor!
The Music In this video sounds great I wonder if a Soundtrack is available...
"All has been looted, betrayed, sold; Black Death's wings flashed ahead." Anna Akhmatova
Lol
Am I the only one who always heard the nursery rhyme Ring around the Rosie with the last lyrics being "ashes to ashes, we all fall down"?
I always heard it like that as a kid.
Mandela effect...
@@e420man3 I think it's more to associate to the biblical verse of ashes to ashes dust to dust
@@nathanwemple7298 could be, i remember hearing it from movies, could also be a hollywood adaptation
Your version of the story is slightly different of the one I know.
Ring around the Rosie's,
Pockets full of Posie's
Ashes ashes we all fall down.
Same, I think most people know this one. The rosies are the flea bites and the ring is the rash that forms around it. Ashes is the cremation of plagued bodies.
@@emilyviktorija9012 Myth alert! The rhyme has nothing to do with the plague.
@@jdb47games it does, it was originally a rhyme based on stories of the bubonic plague but in world war 1 it had a reinsurgence presumably because of all the death caused by the bad times again
@Yodo_specs: it is a myth. Google it if you don't believe me.
@@dawnstorm9768 I googled it and it says it is indeed associated with Black Death and was originally written around the of the great plague of England
It's a miracle we have endured through all these many different things and with shorter lifespans to deal with it all
Please pray for us here in India 🙏 people suffer die everyday of this corona. It's getting worse pray for us
I'm from USA. I hope you people will get through it. Stay strong!
I've never heard "tissue, tissue, we all fall down" before. When I was growing up it was "ashes, ashes, we all fall down".
@kit Where did you grow up? Maybe it's a regional thing. I grew up in Pennsylvania (USA).
Born and raised here in new Zealand and its "atissue! A tissue! We all fall down!
@@cherryrussell7648 Thanks. Clearly a regional thing!
grew up in nyc in the 1970s - it was ashes, ashes
This is the only pandemic i really and interested in learning, Thanks for the Vid🙌
I like how he said we won't have to worry a out another plague to go through yet this was 3 months ago while covid is going on
I know right
Its a joke...
Except covid is a cough not a plague
Covid is not comparable to a plague
Bruh I rather go through COVID because I know I have a high chance to live the Black Death you have 20% chance to even live if you get Covid you have a chance you get the Black Death just plan your funeral
I knew " ashes ashes we all fall down" not "tissue"
Right. No one ever said tissue.
@@cynthialambert9067 umm. The narrator said it and it was printed on the screen while he recited it.
"Ashews" refererred to the sound of sneezing and coughing which were symptoms of the diseases too.
@@johnb8275 I heard ashes as they kept burning the bodies of the dead because there were too many to burry graveyards were too full
@@monicamares9198 I like that explanation even better.
The "ashews" description was something I saw years ago (in the eighties) on a "Ripley's Believe It Or Not" episode.
Jack Palance was the narrator for that program series.
Last time I was this early the dinosaurs were walking around
By the way when I clicked on this video there were 69 comments
nice
nice
?
@@ranium6149 3 YEAR OLD
nice
the gamers held hands around the world and sung the halo theme song
At 7:03 buddy has no body for a second haha
The one I grew up with was Ashes Ashes we all fall down, like ashes raining down from the shy.
A-tishoo A-tisshou we all fall down in Australia.
So this is where the word Quarantine came from
"In a situation that thankfully would never be repeated again..."
The irony 😢
“They just kept going about their business hoping the problem will just fix itself.” How history repeats itself.
How? It didn't though.
The immune system can defeat it on its own. So you could literally do nothing and be fine. Ignorantly wrong
The grim reaper got so freaking tired of people dying he went all around the world
The version of ring ar around the roses went like this "ring around the roses, pockets full of posys, ashis, ashis, we all fall down"
Correct!
wasn't there some italian Bishop that proposed waste disposal, sewers and quarantine? The clergy and nobility was skeptical, but the dude test drove it in a city he was the defacto leader of (due everyone else dying or running) It worked swimmingly and it got adopted.
EDIT: got mentioned, but this is what I know of how this started.
DarkWarchieff That was incoherent, but it does bring to mind that the Romans were big into sanitation and it wouldn't take much brain power for a medieval Italian to think maybe putting the Roman stonework back into operation might be a good idea.
This made me cry :)Great video!
Hopefully you upload a video titled as "How did coronavirus (Covid-19) Actually end?" In the very near future.
It is endemic now, so it will only "end" when the media and governments stop the fearmongering.
I've played enough plague inc and pandemic to know that they just didn't pop enough bubbles
Pop red bubbles
*"You have just invoked the Wrath of BUBONIC 2.0 bc you said that word"*
xD
0:41 those words aged verrrrrry well
A study (Dean et al) published in early 2018 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showed that mortality patterns of the Black Plague of this period more closely resembled transmission by human fleas and lice than transmission by fleas hopping from rodents to humans. In other words, rats may have been part of the problem, but they were not the main source of infection once things got going.
We all know that
We all know that
In an episode of tugs "Quarantine" ships deemed infected were given flags to show they were infected and were told to stay away from port for forty days.
Hey neat, was actually curious about how this went down
I'm Italian and I wanna correct the Italian word at 5:38, he says "quarantino". I don't know if my ancestors would say that word like that but in the current language we say "quarantena". Unfortunately it doesn't change the awful meaning... Stay safe!