Examples of the Black Death in the following topics:
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- The Black Death was an infamous pandemic of bubonic plague and one of the most devastating pandemics in human history.
- When spring arrived, the Italian merchants fled on their ships, unknowingly carrying the Black Death.
- The peak of the activity was during the Black Death.
- The Black Death had a profound impact on art and literature.
- Evaluate the impact of the Black Death on European society in the Middle Ages
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- In 1347 a deadly disease later known as the Black Death struck the Empire, and spread throughout Europe in the years 1348, 1349, and 1350.
- The death toll was about 35 million people in total in Europe - about one-third of the population.
- The trauma of the plague led to an increased piety throughout Europe, which manifested itself in the foundation of new charities, the extreme self-mortification of the flagellants, and the scapegoating of the Jews.
- Conditions were further unsettled by the return of the plague throughout the rest of the 14th century.
- Discuss the Great Famine, the Black Death, and the political and social unrest of the Holy Roman Empire in the 13th and 14th centuries.
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- In the late Middle Ages, influenced by the Black Death and devotional writers, explicit memento mori imagery of death in the forms of skulls or skeletons, or even decomposing corpses overrun with worms in the transi tomb, became common in northern Europe.
- These were often found in funerary art, as were motifs like the Dance of Death and works like the Ars moriendi, or "Art of Dying" .
- Initially, these were brightly colored and patterned, but later were often black.
- Elsewhere, death masks were used in similar fashion.
- "The Mirror of Death": Detail from a French Renaissance monument of 1547.
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- BLM regularly organizes protests around the deaths of black people in killings by law enforcement officers, as well as broader issues of racial profiling, police brutality, and racial inequality in the United States criminal justice system.
- The movement began in 2013 with the use of the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter on social media in response to the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the shooting death of African-American teen Trayvon Martin.
- Black Lives Matter became nationally recognized for its street demonstrations following the 2014 police shooting deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri and Eric Garner in New York City.
- After national media focused on the tragedy, Zimmerman was eventually charged and tried in Martin's death.
- The medical examiner ruled Garner's death a homicide.
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- Woodrow Wilson's policy of military segregation led to conflict, rioting, and the brutal sentencing of the all-black Twenty-Fourth U.S.
- This kept the great majority of black people out of combat.
- The all-black Twenty-Fourth U.S.
- This led to clashes with local authorities, including an incident in which police beat a black soldier and set off a nighttime riot by 156 African-American troops resulting in the shooting deaths of two soldiers, four police officers, and nine civilians.
- Nicknamed the "Harlem Hellfighters," it was the first all-black regiment.
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- "Black Power" is a term used to refer to various ideologies associated with African Americans in the United States, emphasizing racial pride and the creation of black political and cultural institutions to nurture and promote black collective interests and advance black values.
- He left SNCC in 1967 and later joined the Black Panthers.
- Racial riots broke out in the black community in cities from Boston to San Francisco following King's death.
- Gaining national prominence, the Black Panther Party became an icon of the counterculture of the 1960s.
- The 1960s composed a decade not only of Black Power but also of Black Pride.
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- At the time of the American Revolution, some blacks had already been enlisted as Minutemen.
- Peter Salem, who had been freed by his owner to join the Framingham militia was one of the blacks in the militia.
- During the course of the war, about one fifth of the northern army consisted of black males.
- This order did not apply to blacks already serving in the army.
- This picture depicts the death of African-American Crispus Attucks, who was believed to be the first person killed at the Boston Massacre.
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- Jackie Robinson was the first black Major League Baseball player in the United States.
- Baseball fans and players reacted to Robinson with everything from unbridled enthusiasm, evident in newspaper headlines, to wariness and open hostility, expressed in beanball pitches and death threats.
- The Sporting News, which had opposed blacks in the major leagues, gave Robinson its first Rookie of the Year Award in 1947.
- The Dodgers succeeded well with such black stars as Jackie Robinson, Roy Campanella, and Don Newcombe.
- Jackie Robinson was the first black Major League Baseball player in the United States
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- Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation enabled blacks to join the Union Army, giving the Union an advantage, and helped end the Civil War.
- The Emancipation Proclamation enabled African-Americans, both free blacks and escaped slaves, to join the Union Army.
- Slavery for the Confederacy's 3.5 million blacks effectively ended when Union armies arrived.
- The war produced about 1,030,000 casualties (3% of the population), including about 620,000 soldier deaths—two-thirds by disease.
- The war accounted for roughly as many American deaths as all American deaths in other U.S. wars combined.
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- Changes in blood vessels that serve brain tissue reduce nourishment to the brain, resulting in the malfunction and death of brain cells.
- Atherosclerosis can lead to an MI, the leading cause of death for both men and women all over the world.
- The term myocardial infarction is derived from myocardium (the heart muscle) and infarction (tissue death).
- In fact, cardiac arrythmias are one of the most common causes of death en route to hospitals.
- Movat stain (black = nuclei, elastic fibers; yellow = collagen, reticular fibers; blue = ground substance, mucin; bright red = fibrin; red = muscle).