The Bubonic Plague & The Great Fire of London

London faced the Bubonic Plague (The Black Death) in 1665, and just a year later, they were hit by the famous Great Fire of London. Lucian explains how this is quite an interesting conflict…

#258STEMFacts #BubonicPlague #GreatFireofLondon #STEMinASL

ID: Lucian is wearing a yellow beanie and dark plaid shirt, standing in front of a white wall with some art frames hung up. They sign as captions appear above. A graphic of a fire shows up by the captions when Lucian signs “a raging fire.” A black rat appears when Lucian signs “infected rats.” The closing video shows white background with blue text: Enjoyed this video? Black text: Please consider donating; your support will help keep our content & resources FREE! Green button with black text: atomichands.com/donate. Image of an iPhone with Atomic Hands’ menu webpage shows with menu options: ASL STEM Storybooks, ASL STEM Videos, ASL STEM Resources, ASL STEM Dictionaries, ASL STEM News, ASL STEM Events, and Deaf STEMist Network.

Transcript: Do you remember learning about the Bubonic Plague, nicknamed “The Black Death.” This disease has impacted humans all over the world for thousands of years. In 1665, people in London began getting sick and developed black skin sores. Many got sick and passed away, no matter their economic status or age; the disease impacted anyone. A year later in 1666, London was hit by a raging fire that destroyed the city. It was known as “The Great Fire of London.” The fire destroyed everything, including houses, stores, and hospitals. Even if you had a fancy house, the fire destroyed it. Back then, there was a lack of effective methods to put out fire. People lost their houses, families, and/or their lives. Putting this into perspective, the Black Death was spread by a disease that infected rats carried. Flea-infested rats spread the disease to humans. The Great Fire of London killed thousands of rats… so the fire might have helped reduce the Bubonic Plague by eliminating the rats and the fleas they carried. Quite an interesting conflict!

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