DNA Black Plague London 1349 AD 1 match a male
DNA Black Plague London 1349 x 1 match , a male d. 1349
DNA Black Plague London 1349 AD 1 match a male
http://proza.ru/2026/02/06/1728
https://stihi.ru/2026/02/06/7444
DNA Black Plague London 1349 x 1 match , a male d. 1349
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
The 1st Black Death cemetery in London
Black Plague London
The 1st Black Death cemetery in London
The Royal Mint medieval cemetery in London :
East Smithfield Black Plague Victims London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victims London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE13x (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: HV0b
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
Genetic Distance: 11.251
Sample Match! 98 % closer than other users
male
LE13x (1349 AD)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
Black Plague London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
More:
By True Ancestry
https://mytrueancestry.com/c/main.py
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
No more matching samples
Show non-matching samples...
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE09 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H1c1
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE10 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: V
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE142 (1349 AD)
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE114r (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H6a1b2
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE16 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H6a1a3
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE02 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: T2c1d+152
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE09 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H1c1
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE10x (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: V
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE11 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H2a2b
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE12 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H6a1b2c
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE143 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: J1b1a1e
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE146 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H3g1b
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE131 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: U5b2a5
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE140 (1349 AD)
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
Black Plague London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
The 1st Black Death cemetery in London
More:
By True Ancestry
https://mytrueancestry.com/c/main.py
Black Plague London
It was the year 1347 - the Genoan city of Caffa on the Crimean coast was under siege by the Khan of the Golden Horde supported by Tartars. Suddenly the besiegers began to die mysteriously on mass - an affliction arrived from the East
- a bacteria called Yersinia Pestis
also known as the Plague.
Incredibly deadly and contagious, it can invade the human immune system itself.
Three main variants of the disease existed
- The Bubonic form was the least lethal where the victim would show flu like symptoms with a bloody cough - about 60 % would die as a result.
The infected lymph nodes would grow and could disfigure the victim.
- The Pneumonic variant was when the lungs would be infected and transmission would occur in the air. Life expectancy was about 3 days and over 90 % would die.
- The third most lethal variant was when the bloodstream was directly infected -
with a 100 % mortality rate and death within 14 hours of infection.
People would kiss their healthy loved ones good night and find them dead in the morning.
The plague
also had the perfect method for expansion due
to the species of rats and fleas which carried it.
The Black Rat, Rattus Rattus
was half the size of its cousin the Brown Rat,
but was capable of breeding from a single pair to over 3 million in just 3 years.
It could also climb vertical surfaces, climb through holes smaller than a centimetre
and survive falls of over 5 stories.
Their jaw could cut through lead, adobe and even concrete.
These rats were intelligent and after establishing a nest would instinctively engineer an escape route and then proceed to cautiously scavenge for food.
Their bodies served as an ideal reservoir for
the Oriental Flea,
also known as the Rat Flea.
They can live without a host for a month with powerful hind legs jump over half a meter.
However the most lethal detail is once this particular type of flea was infected with plague,
its stomach would be blocked and its appetite grew causing it to bite its target multiple times ensuring transmission of the disease.
The combination of rat and flea proved to be the ideal transmitter for the disease.
The Khan
in charge of the siege at Caffa (Pheodosia in Crimea modern days)
decided to fire the bodies by catapult into the city hoping to create a stench which would drive the inhabitants to surrender. As the catapulted bodies exploded on impact the disease spread everywhere inside. Eventually the defenders were forced to flee -
and over 200 ships and galleons left the harbor -
their destinations the great ports of the entire Mediterranean world -
starting with Constantinople and on to Egypt, the Levant, Sicily, Italy, France and Iberia.
The plague relentlessly advanced 4km per day crossing rivers, mountain passes and entering every city.
Plague ridden ships would send goods everywhere.
In Milan they would wall up anyone infected into tombs within their own homes -
keep in mind Milan had a death rate of only 15 %.
Casimir III of Poland
enforced a strict quarantine
and anyone showing signs of plague
were literally bricked into their own homes.
The strict controls, spread out population and abundance of cats curbed the rat population and kept the deaths low.
In Venice islands were setup to quarantine people - and the word quarantine comes from the idea of keeping someone for quaranti giorni - or 40 days in isolation.
In some towns the destruction was so complete
that nature would retake the land
and only aerial photos taken during the First World War
would show there had been
pre-Plague towns at all.
By the summer of 1348 a fisherman in the English Channel saw the first plague flags appear on the French coast. The Battle for Britain would soon begin after a particularly good summer. Social distancing had not taken effect as trade was the focus - after all there were more sheep in England than people - and this valuable export was high in demand. War trophies from the recent campaign of King Edwards III against France kept trickling in.
Along the channel coast, Southhampton, Portsmouth, Melcombe and Bristol
saw the first impact.
A cruel death took two days to break out all over town.
The plague moved inland along the roads and river systems.
There was a 33 % death rate in continental Europe,
but in England it was on average an incredible 55%
with some towns reaching over 90% deaths.
Incinerated remains would create a nightmarish landscape of smoke plumes emanating from nearby towns with the ashes of the dead raining on the people down below.
The Plague began its work with a brutal efficiency never seen before - killing on the beaches, on the landing grounds, in the fields, streets and the hills - it would seem it would never surrender.
In Autumn of 1348,
London
was hit
- a town with apalling sanitary conditions
even by Medieval standards.
The Pneumonic variant
hit first during the cold months
followed by the Bubonic wave.
By late 1349 Scotland
watched closely and cheered as havoc wreaked over England.
They prepared a massive Scottish army to invade England -
but then the Black Plague arrived with a sudden force -
wiping out the army before it could begin its march.
In 1350
Alphonso XI of Castille
was preparing to take Gibraltar
and destroy the Emirate of Granada.
Instead he became the only reigning monarch to die of the plague
and the Reconquista took another 150 years to complete.
A shattered and desperate Europe looked for answers - many felt this was divine retribution for the sins of humanity.
Paris, the scientific masters of Europe
had a great meeting of the learned 46 masters,
determined the Black Death was indeed
caused by Saturn Mars and Jupiter
forming a pattern at 13:00
on March 20 1345.
Vapors were corrupted at the time of conjunctions and created corrupted airs which destroyed the life force.
Medical treatments included a doctor wearing a plague doctor uniform,
lancing the open buboes
and then throwing in a mix of herbs and human excrement
into the draining wound.
The airborne vapor theory came out and some sought out clean air to offset the noxious odors. Drinking urine of non-infected also became a popular cure.
Fire would also be used as a solution to ward of evil vapours. Pope Clement VI would sit between two log fires when doing a mass - he survived the plague. Plague doctors would wear the equivalent of a medieval hazmat suit - thick leather covering would almost seal off their body from direct contact. The birdlike masks would shield breathing - the beaks would be full of herbs and flour to keep away the putrid smells of the dead. The eyepieces were made of glass and later crystal dyed in red color. Some masks even had the eyes offset preventing the doctor from the patient in the eye, in the event eye contact would spread the disease. While not able to cure their patients, they were able to ease the pain of the dying. Ships traveling to Scandinavia from England would be found adrift with nothing onboard except ravaged corpses.
At least 1/3 of Europe died from the Black Death (in reality probably far more) -
this far worse than any other Yersinia Pestis invasion.
However labor costs skyrocketed, food costs dropped and peasants saw their standard of living grow - possibly the beginning of the end of serfdom - certainly civilization as it had stood had been put to the challenge. Human ingenuity flourished as people sought to replace the lack of manpower with machine power.
The Royal Mint medieval cemetery in London
is located in East Smithfield -
the cemetery
was in use
between 1348-1350
and was
the first established Black Death cemetery in London.
Black Plague London
In Autumn of 1348,
London
was hit
- a town with apalling sanitary conditions
even by Medieval standards.
The Pneumonic variant
hit first during the cold months
followed by the Bubonic wave.
The Royal Mint medieval cemetery in London
is located in East Smithfield -
the cemetery
was in use
between 1348-1350
and was
the first established Black Death cemetery in London.
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
The 1st Black Death cemetery in London
Black Plague London
The 1st Black Death cemetery in London
The Royal Mint medieval cemetery in London :
East Smithfield Black Plague Victims London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victims London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE13x (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: HV0b
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
Genetic Distance: 11.251
Sample Match! 98 % closer than other users
male
LE13x (1349 AD)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
Black Plague London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
No more matching samples
Show non-matching samples...
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE09 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H1c1
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE10 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: V
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE142 (1349 AD)
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE114r (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H6a1b2
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE16 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H6a1a3
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE02 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: T2c1d+152
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE09 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H1c1
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE10x (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: V
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE11 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H2a2b
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE12 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H6a1b2c
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE143 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: J1b1a1e
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE146 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: H3g1b
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE131 (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: U5b2a5
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE140 (1349 AD)
(You do not match this sample)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
Black Plague London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
The 1st Black Death cemetery in London
Black Plague London
The 1st Black Death cemetery in London
The Royal Mint medieval cemetery in London :
East Smithfield Black Plague Victims London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victims London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
LE13x (1349 AD)
mtDNA Haplogroup: HV0b
Y-DNA Haplogroup: Uncertain
Genetic Distance: 11.251
Sample Match! 98 % closer than other users
male
LE13x (1349 AD)
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London
Black Plague London
Black Plague London
East Smithfield Black Plague Victim London (1349 AD)
Black Plague London
More:
By True Ancestry
https://mytrueancestry.com/c/main.py
Black Plague London
Black Plague London
Black Plague London
DNA Black Plague London 1349 x 1 match , a male d. 1349
DNA Black Plague London 1349 x 1 match , a male d. 1349
DNA Black Plague London 1349 AD 1 match a male
http://proza.ru/2026/02/06/1728
https://stihi.ru/2026/02/06/7444
DNA Black Plague London 1349 x 1 match , a male d. 1349
Свидетельство о публикации №226020601728