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4[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_blackdeath.jpg]]
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6->''Has what happened in these years ever been read about: empty houses, derelict cities, ruined estates, fields strewn with cadavers, a horrible and vast solitude encompassing the whole world? Consult historians, they are silent; ask physicians, they are stupefied; seek the answer from philosophers, they shrug their shoulders, furrow their brows, and with fingers pressed against their lips, bid you be silent. Will posterity believe these things, when we who have seen it can scarcely believe it?''
7-->-- '''{{Creator/Petrarch}}''', ''Letters on Familiar Matters'' (1349)
8
9The pathogen ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yersinia_pestis Yersinia pestis]]'', originating from Central UsefulNotes/{{Asia}}, has caused some of the deadliest pandemics in human history, peaking in UsefulNotes/{{Europe}} between [[TheLateMiddleAges 1346 and 1353]] in the Great Pestilence with strains continuing until the 1700s. Both the event and the disease are also known by the name given by later writers, the Black Death. Experienced by the whole of Eurasian/Mediterranean civilization to some degree, it so traumatized the human race that the formal name the disease was given in UsefulNotes/{{Europe}}, derived from the Latin words for ''to strike down'', and ''to lament''[[note]]''plaga'' and ''plangere'' respectively[[/note]], is to this day synonymous with both "widespread threat to society" and "lethal contagious disease": ThePlague. It's believed that an outright majority of Europe and Asia's population was killed by this outbreak. In terms of absolute numbers, with anywhere between 75 million and 200 million deaths, it was the absolute deadliest pandemic ever recorded and proportionally ''the single deadliest event in recorded history.''
10
11Keep in mind that the disease is not called the "bubonic plague"; it's simply "plague". "Bubonic" is merely one way the disease plays out: by infecting the lymph system and colonizing the lymph nodes, which swell up into "bubos". In coastal areas, the most common form of plague at that time was pneumonic plague, which affects the lungs. Septicemic plague affects the bloodstream. The difference? Pneumonic plague kills all but a handful of sufferers, mostly within a week of the first symptoms. Septicemic plague is always fatal and can kill within hours of the first symptoms appearing, or sometimes even ''before any symptoms occur''. [[note]]Even with the intervention of modern medicine within the first 24 hours, the survival rate only goes up to 4-15%.[[/note]] People would rise well in the morning, develop symptoms by noon, and be dead by nightfall. Bubonic plague victims, on the other hand, can take days or even weeks to die, and around one-third actually ''survive'' with long lasting traumatic damage to their internal organs and immune systems -- with the effect of making these victims the most noticeable and horrifying.
12
13The disturbing explanation for the disease's alternate name, the black death, is that in both the septisemic and bubonic presentations, the victims are left in a horrific swollen and decaying state due to a combination of ruptured lymph nodes and frostbite-like patches of black gangrene -- ''before they die''. Following the plague pandemic, this image was so burned into Europe's psyche that it spawned our modern visualization of TheUndead, a stark contrast to the prior depictions of liches and kin as [[LooksLikeCesare unusually pale but otherwise unremarkable]], [[LooksLikeOrlok animalistic]], or [[DemBones totally skeletal]].
14
15There have been many other outbreaks of plague other than the 1348-1350 pandemic. The most recent occurred at the beginning of the 20th century, killing tens of millions in India and China, and the earliest outbreak for which we have definitive historical evidence (at least according to some historians) is The Plague of Justinian in the 6th Century. The growing use of antibiotics, the invention of vaccines centuries later, and the improvement of hygiene conditions have ensured that no plague pandemic of such scale can happen anymore in most modern countries, but there are still limited outbreaks in the areas where there's a lack of these.
16
17One of the things that made the plague so horrible is that there wasn't any escape. Most diseases spread from person to person and thus hit urban areas far harder than rural. People seeking to escape an epidemic could flee to the countryside. However, yersinia pestis is carried by rats [[note]] More specifically, by the fleas that are carried by the rats. While they ''do'' sometimes occur on other animals, the fleas have a heavy preference for rats [[/note]], and rats are territorial such that their population density was uniform in medieval Europe and the plague was likewise uniform. Where other diseases were epidemic and the superstitious could blame them on moral decay in urban centers, the black death was pandemic and it could only have felt like the entire world was being condemned by heaven.
18
19When this appears in a story you know things are quickly going to go downhill for the heroes (if there even are heroes). Due to its transcending memories of death, destruction, and desperation, such stories generally have a DownerEnding. It tends to be used because to most cultures, death is feared and a reminder of our own mortality is chilling.
20
21Compare: UsefulNotes/TheSpanishFlu and the UsefulNotes/Covid19Pandemic.
22
23See also ThePlague for devastating pandemics in general. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Death For more on the science and history of the plague, see the Other Wiki.]]
24
25!!As a {{Death Trope|s}}, all Spoilers will be unmarked ahead. Beware.
26----
27!!Examples:
28
29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
32* ''Literature/ProblemChildrenAreComingFromAnotherWorldArentThey'' has one of the characters being the MoeAnthropomorphism of The Black Death, Black Percher with her real name being Pestilence/Pest.
33* ''Manga/GodChild'' has a small arc that revolved around a woman who was [[ActuallyNotAVampire mistaken to be a vampire]] due to the amount of deaths that have been on the rise and her looking incredibly young for a lady in her 40s at the time, but it's revealed that the people died due to the plague and she had no real part in it.
34* ''Literature/ParallelWorldPharmacy'': The finale of the anime focuses around preventing The Black Death from proliferating throughout the kingdom and its capital.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Comic Books]]
38* In ''ComicBook/Robin1993'', the biological weapon Edmund Dorrance gets his hands on is revealed to be the black death, which an old Nazi scientist had managed to recreate and which Dorrance somehow heard of and sent his hired help to go track down.
39* The 1373 special issue of ''ComicBook/TheWickedAndTheDivine'' is set during the outbreak. The plague was apparently created by a previous Recurrance of the Pantheon and Ananke deliberately spread it in the 1370s to see what would happen. This ends up [[HoistByHisOwnPetard coming back to bite her]] as she gets infected by the disease and is left bedridden.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Fan Works]]
43* ''FanFic/BigHumanOnCampus'' reveals that witches were responsible for the Black Death in their cycle of DisproportionateRetribution with humans, much to Yukari's horror.
44* The ''Fanfic/DayOfTheBarneyTrilogy'' reveals that Barney is responsible for this.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Film]]
48* The British film ''Film/{{Anazapta}}'' had a name change to ''Black Plague'' for its American release, and [[NeverTrustATrailer one trailer implied it was all about this trope]]. In truth it's a mystery thriller set when the Black Death has started to arrive in Britain.
49* ''Film/BlackDeath'' [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin obviously]] has this as a topic. It shows well how different people responded to the outbreak in 1348.
50* The Black Death plays a major thematic role in ''Film/TheSeventhSeal''.
51* According to ''Film/BatmanBegins'', the Black Death was the League of Shadows' doing.
52* ''Film/LadySnowblood2LoveSongOfVengeance'': The bad guys rather foolishly inject Ransui with the plague before throwing him back into the general population.
53* ''Film/TheLastDuel'': The film's events occur in 1386, roughly 40 years after the start of the pandemic that decimated Europe. It calmed down circa 1353, but there are still outbreaks here and there as characters talk about the economy being slowed down by the loss of workers/serfs to it.
54* Referenced without being named in the [[TheDungAges Dung Ages]] scene of ''Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail'', and PlayedForLaughs of course. It's easy to guess what causes all the casualties that the "Bring out your dead!" guy comes to seek and put in his cart, and a woman smacking a cat against a wall alludes to people killing cats out of superstition in the Plague times. Several people who want to hide from the cart are seen coughing, probably out of the pneumonic form of the Plague.
55* ''Film/PanicInTheStreets'' is about a random crook who gets murdered over a crooked card game. Things take a turn when the autopsy reveals the dead guy was going to die within 24 hours anyway because he had pneumonic plague. A heroic doctor and the cops then go on a frantic chase to find the killers before they spread plague all over the city.
56* ''Film/SeasonOfTheWitch'' takes place during the Black Death, though it misrepresents its symptoms as being more similar to leprosy (probably to increase its horror value) and ends on the revelation that it was created by a demon to raise an undead army.
57* In ''Film/MissMend'', anti-Bolshevik terrorists set out to unleash the Black Death on the Soviet Union by concealing ampoules of plague culture inside electrical insulators.
58* ''Film/WhiteShadowsInTheSouthSeas'': Dr. Matthew Lloyd, who has become too troublesome to the EvilColonialist in charge of a south Pacific island, is set adrift on the open ocean in a boat filled with victims of the plague. Luckily for Lloyd the ship runs aground next to an island before he catches it.
59* The 2017 ''Film/{{Beauty And The Beast|2017}}'' reveals that Belle's mother died from this when Belle was too young to remember her. Although given that the movie seems take place around the 18th century, it's likely one of the later outbreaks rather than the Black Death itself.
60* ''Film/IsleOfTheDead'' revolves around the people on an isolated island finding out that septicemic plague is in their midst. DwindlingParty ensues, as does paranoia, fear, and murder as the situation deteriorates.
61* In ''Film/TheScarletPimpernel1934'', the titular character dresses up as an old woman and sneaks out a fellow aristocrat; when questioned by a soldier, "she" claims to be escorting her young grandson, who unfortunately is afflicted by what she claims is "the horrible black plague!" The soldier hastily sends her on her way.
62* In Disney's ''Film/SwissFamilyRobinson'', Mr. Robinson wards off a pirate ship by [[YouDontWantToCatchThis raising a quarantine flag, "warning that there's Black Death aboard."]] [[ArtisticLicenseShips The flag portrayed as a quarantine flag is actually the "India" signal flag.]]
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Folklore]]
66* Modern folklore has it that the NurseryRhyme "Ring Around the Rosie" is actually a description of the Black Death. As any folklorist will tell you, this is a JustSoStory supported by no historical evidence. [[https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/ring-around-rosie/ Snopes has a debunking.]]
67* In Northern Europe, the effect of the black death was so severe it held the population down for centuries. It didn't help much that the disease showed up time and again all the way to 1650. In Norway especially, people came to see the plague incarnate as an old hag, clad in dark clothes, wielding a broom and a rake. Her face was either a skull or made of decomposing flesh. Tradition has it that she usually saved some if she used the rake. On the other hand, if she used the broom, no one was spared. In continental Europe a [[SinisterScythe scythe]] was added to that imagery, thus TheGrimReaper was born.
68** Based on {{truth in television}} in the more remote parts of Norway and possibly Sweden, where the entire population of some valleys were found dead after the plague, and were not repopulated for 200 years. In one particular case, a lone hunter just accidentally stumbled over the local church, still standing in the middle of nowhere. In the meantime, the building was made a hive for bears. The bearskin allegedly still hangs on the wall in this particular church.
69** The most known depiction of the Plague Hag (Pesta) was made in the late nineteenth century by Norwegian painter Theodor Kittelsen, who claimed to have met her in a dark wood near his home. And he ran really fast on his way home. He claimed [[http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fil:Theodor_Kittelsen_-_Pesta_i_trappen,_1896_%28Pesta_on_the_Stairs%29.jpg she looked like this]].
70* Myth/RomaniMythology: The black death is personified as the cat and dog headed Poreskoro. This is not as cute as it sounds.
71* Some versions of the classic "Vanishing Hotel Room" urban legend end with the explanation that the sick mother/daughter was vanished because she had a deadly disease, and the hotel/city wished to prevent a mass panic. If the disease is specified, it's usually the Black Death.
72[[/folder]]
73
74[[folder:Literature]]
75* Boccaccio's ''Literature/{{Decameron}}'' (written a few years after the plague) is about ten wealthy young Florentines (seven noble ladies and three gentlemen) who decamp to the countryside with their retinue to escape from the plague, and pass their days in storytelling.
76* In the AlternateHistory novel ''Literature/TheYearsOfRiceAndSalt'', the Black Death is even more deadly than it was in real life, and causes the ''extinction'' of Western civilization, allowing Asian, Muslim, and Native American cultures to become dominant.
77* At the end of ''Literature/TheNameOfTheRose'' (set in 1327) it's mentioned that William of Baskerville eventually died during the Black Death.
78* Ken Follett's ''Literature/WorldWithoutEnd'' includes a section where the plague comes to Kingsbridge and Caris, our heroine, desperately struggles to limit the destruction. Later parts of the book deal with the sociological changes the plague brought.
79* When everyone in the Creator/MichaelCrichton novel ''Literature/{{Timeline}}'' get tired of the CorruptCorporateExecutive, they send him back in time to 14th century Europe at the height of ThePlague. It takes him a little while to realize just where he's been sent, [[OhCrap but when he puts it together he notes that he's already showing symptoms...]]
80* ''A Journal of the Plague Year'', as its name says, deals with the epidemic of London between 1664 and 1666.
81* In ''The Trolls'', the children's usual babysitter is unable to look after them, because she caught a "touch of" the Black Death while vacationing in Europe. Alarmingly, she still offers to show up if the parents ''really'' need a babysitter. The mom understandably doesn't take her up on this offer.
82* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'':
83** In ''Literature/DeathMasks'', it's [[InUniverse revealed]] that the Black Death was originally caused by {{Fallen Angel}}s using magic. The plot of the book involves them preparing to do it again.
84** It is later mentioned again in ''Literature/ColdDays''. Harry knocks some jars off a shelf in the home of Mothers Winter and Summer, and when he puts them back, he notices the labels.
85---> The writing on the cracked pot said simply, ''Wormwood''.\
86The letters began to fade, but I saw some of the others: ''Typhos. Pox. Atermors. Choleros. Malaros.''\
87Typhus. Smallpox. The Black Death. Cholera. Malaria.\
88And Wormwood.\
89And there were ''lots'' of other jars on the shelf.
90* Creator/ConnieWillis' Hugo- and Nebula-award winning novel ''Literature/DoomsdayBook'' is set in a future version of Oxford where time-travel has become possible, but is used mostly by historians. Kivrin Engle, who studies medieval history, convinces history professor Dunworthy to send her back to the 14th century. Unfortunately, something goes (very) wrong, and Kivrin finds herself in the middle of the 1348 Black Death epidemic. Oopsies!
91* A good amount of Scandinavian literature covers the period, due to the fact that the demographics and political landscape changed radically in these areas, at least partly because of the plague. And the plague survived in living tradition all over the place.
92** Norwegian examples include ''Literature/TheBridegroom'', telling the tragic story of a girl who falls in love with a fiddler who dies in the plague, and the story of ''Literature/GuroHeddeli'', telling the tragic story of another girl who falls victim to the plague. Later, the children´s book ''A Ship Arrived In Bjorgvin In 1349'' gave a more accurate account of the subject.
93* In ''Literature/UpTheLine'', by Creator/RobertSilverberg, there is a popular series of time tours tracing the 14th century Black Death epidemic. Protagonist Jud, while a bit depressed, takes one tour in the series of four (it was the one he could get a spot in on short notice).
94* ''A Parcel of Patterns'', among other works, tells the true story of a Derbyshire village called Eyam whose inhabitants voluntarily quarantined themselves for over a year when the plague reached them.
95* In ''Literature/HoratioHornblower and Noah's Ark'', Midshipman Hornblower is sent to pick up supplies from the city of Oran on the day of a plague outbreak. Facing a three-week quarantine in a plague city with a crew of panicky men and a delay in desperately-needed foodstuffs, Hornblower asks and is allowed to spend the period on the ship--they're more effectively quarantined at sea than anywhere else and it gets them back to the fleet quickly (fortunately, they evade contagion).
96* A large portion of ''Literature/TheDwarf'' is spent with the titular character observing the death and desperation around him as the Black Death strikes his city.
97* Both pneumonic and bubonic strains feature in the novel ''Literature/ThePlague'' which details a outbreak of the disease in the French Algerian city of Oran.
98* ''Literature/Area51'': It's revealed the Airlia weaponized the disease to cull humanity in the past. They do so again in the present, making it even worse.
99* The ''Franchise/DoctorWhoExpandedUniverse Literature/NewSeriesAdventures'' novel ''Plague City'' has the Doctor and companions arrive in Edinburgh during the great plague of 1645.
100* Parry, the incarnation of Evil (aka Satan) in ''Literature/IncarnationsOfImmortality'' helps cause the plague as revenge for his humiliation at the hands of the other incarnations. He regrets that it gets as out of hand as it does, however, and at Chronos' behest, though he can't stop it outright, he helps spare at least one city that will be important to the renaissance. In a nice bit of accuracy, he does this by having his minion Beelzebub (official title: Lord of Flies) draw the fleas away from the city, so the plague doesn't get a hold there.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Live Action TV]]
104* In ''Series/CathedralOfTheSea'', Arnau returns to Barcelona during the plague years and saves two Jewish children from an antisemitic mob.
105* The opening of the Series/GhostsUK episode “About Last Night”, shows Nick brings back gifts for his village after his trip from London. Unbeknownst to them, they were infected with the plague, thus the whole village got infected and died.
106* In the ''Series/{{Highlander}}'' TV series, Amanda died for the first time during the Black Death. She was not sick herself but she was stealing from houses under quarantine and was clubbed to death because people assumed she was infected.
107* In an episode of ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'', a number of people slip through the time rift into present-day Cardiff -- causing, among other things, an outbreak of bubonic plague. Fortunately, Owen recognizes it, and these days it's treatable.
108* In the ''Series/SecretArmy'' episode "Ring of Rosies" LaResistance discover that an Allied airman being sheltered by them caught bubonic plague from his service in Africa, and so they must prevent the other members of his unit from escaping and infecting an occupied population suffering from lack of food and medical care. One man who does so is [[QuarantineWithExtremePrejudice gunned down]] and his body burnt by MolotovCocktail.
109* ''Series/{{NCIS}}''. Tony opens a letter and gets sprayed by a white powder that they naturally assume is anthrax, but it turns out to be weaponised ''Y. pestis''. There is no cure, but fortunately as a fit, well-nourished male with access to modern medical care Tony's chances of surviving are a lot better. The company who produced it as a testing ground for new medicines also engineered it to self-destruct after a day of exposure so it won't cause an outbreak.
110* In ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'', an early case involves plague being found on a Navy ship. In a RequiredSpinoffCrossover, Tony is sent in from DC to assist on the case, because of his previous experience.
111* ''Series/TheCollector'': The plague features prominently in Morgan's past.
112* The patient of the week is infected with this in the ''Series/{{House}}'' episode "Sleeping Dogs Lie" although she doesn't die from it.
113* ''Series/TrueBlood'': In a flashback, we learn that in the 17th Century, Nora was helping people infected, contracting the illness herself in the process. This led to Godric turning her into a vampire.
114* ''Series/FrontierCircus'': In "Incident at Pawnee Gun", Casey finds himself in a QuarantineWithExtremePrejudice situation when peace officers believe his chimpanzee has the bubonic plague.
115* The ecoterrorists in the second series of ''Series/TheBridge2011'' are developing a supercharged genetically-engineered version of plague, intending to release it at a meeting of the EU member states' environment ministers.
116* The second ''Series/HoratioHornblower'' telefilm is based in part on ''Hornblower and Noah's Ark''. While quarantined at sea, one of the sailors starts weaving and swaying, prompting the others to try and toss him overboard using spars until Hornblower steps in. There's a tense moment when Hornblower gets close to the man, but a sniff of his breath shows that he's just drunk. Later, the reckless Dreadnought Foster takes some cattle before the quarantine is up, over Hornblower's voluble protests.
117* The Black Death shows up in the first season of ''Series/{{Blackadder}}'', in the episode "Witchsmeller Pursuivant".
118* In the ''Series/FatherBrown'' episode "The Alchemist's Secret," Father Brown and his old friend Professor Hilary Ambrose investigate the alleged hiding of an alchemical formula to turn lead into gold, supposedly hidden in a secret chamber at Ambrose's university. There is indeed a formula hidden there, but it's actually for concentrated, weaponized version of the plague that was tested on a nearby village, wiping said village from the map.
119* ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'': In "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S3E4LastSupper Last Supper]]", Jade discovered that she was immortal at 20 years old when everyone else in her village in Spain died of the Black Death and she survived.
120* ''Series/PlanetOfTheApes'': In "The Surgeon", Leander tells Urko that there is an outbreak of the Black Death in the clinic so that he will leave quickly and Galen, Virdon and Burke can escape.
121* ''Series/MysteryHunters'': Mentioned for the background of the Edinburgh Vaults that Araya visits. The location is was once a street where it's inhabitants were killed by the black death and, once empty, had a street built over it. Araya investigates reports that ghosts of the inhabitants, including a little girl named Annie, now roam in the vaults.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Music]]
125* Creator/SeananMcGuire's cheery FilkSong "The Black Death" argues for the theory that the Black Death was not in fact Y. Pestis:
126-->''Speaking epidemiologically, bubonic plague doesn't make sense to me.''\
127''Yersinia pestis gets you dead, it's true, but it isn't as effective as the common flu.''\
128''If you want to wipe out half of Europe's population, you'll need a better agent for your devastation;''\
129''You need a viral agent that is tried and tragic -- let's take a look at fevers that are hemorrhagic.''
130* The whole album ''A Chronicle of the Plague'' as well as the track "Breath of the Black Plague" from the album ''Twilight of Europe'' by the Ukrainian minimalist dark {{ambient}} band Music/DarkAges are all about the subject.
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Podcast]]
134* The ''Podcast/TwilightHistories'' episode “Mask of the Plague Doctor” takes place in Medieval Florence in 1348, the year the plague arrived in Italy.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Tabletop Game]]
138* ''TabletopGame/ArsMagica'' is set in a [[MedievalEuropeanFantasy fantasy version of Europe]] in the early 1200s, over a century before the Great Pestilence, but some scenarios (like the module ''Black Death'') suggest introducing the plague as [[MysticalPlague a demonically-driven attack on humanity by Hell]].
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:Theatre]]
142* The Black Death plays a small but decisive role in ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet''. The reason Friar Laurence's letter never reaches Romeo is that the messenger got stuck in a plague quarantine.
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Theme Parks & Attractions]]
146* At the ''Ride/LondonDungeon'', there's a section about the Great Plague of UsefulNotes/{{London}} of 1665-1666. A PlagueDoctor will look for symptoms of the plague in the group of visitors and ask which member is looking "a bit peaky".
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Video Games]]
150* A scheduled event in ''VideoGame/MedievalIITotalWar''. You can have isolated outbreaks of generic plagues at any time, but near the endgame the world is rocked by the historical Black Death. Typically the campaign crashes to a halt as armies lose men faster than replacements can be recruited, royal family members die left and right, and nations' economies tank from all those dead peasants. Of course, an enterprising player can take advantage of this by, say, [[VideoGameCrueltyPotential sneaking a Spy into an afflicted settlement and sending him to infiltrate as many enemy cities as possible before expiring...]]
151* The spread of the Black Death is also one of the few scripted events guaranteed to happen in both ''VideoGame/CrusaderKings'' games, where it's almost instantly lethal to any character that catches it and effectively destroys the economy of any provinces it spreads to. An expansion for the second game, ''The Reaper's Due'', focuses on plagues and diseases in general. Special attention is given to the Black Death itself, with major announcements as it spreads through various regions and several events related to the nobility and peasantry reacting to the devastation it brings.
152* One scenario of ''VideoGame/PlagueInc'' allows you to take control of a modern-day outbreak of the Black Death and evolve it so that it kills off humanity. It starts off quite contagious and ''very'' lethal at the cost of blatant, undeniable and panic-inducing presence on the infected, with completely accurate symptoms, but it can evolve into something milder or worse depending on what you do (usually one followed by the other, to make sure everyone catches it).
153* Though ''VideoGame/Vampyr2018'' takes place during [[UsefulNotes/TheSpanishFlu the 1918 Spanish flu]], the Black Death (more specifically the 1665 Plague of London) is referenced several times in the backstory and are revealed to have be tied: [[spoiler:It turns out that both diseases were engineered by the [[BigBad Red Queen]] to make humanity suffer and sent a [[WalkingWasteland Disaster]], a HumanoidAbomination in her service, to spread it whenever they went. The Black Death was ended when [[BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy vampire champion]] [[HistoricalDomainCharacter William Marshall]] fought against the Disaster in 1666 under St. Paul's Cathedral, with him being forced to burn the church down and [[BeenThereShapedHistory causing the Great Fire of London]] to make sure she was dead]].
154* ''VideoGame/APlagueTaleInnocence'' is set during the time of the Black Death. While the plague itself is mentioned several times, the primary thread in the game are the SwarmOfRats that eat everything in their path.
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder:Webcomics]]
158* Maggie in ''Webcomic/TimesLikeThis'' is a victim of the Black Death in Ireland [[http://timeslikethis.com/?id=224 at first]]... but Cassie then takes her to a future time, [[WeWillHavePerfectHealthInTheFuture when vending machines have the cure for any ailment]], and gives her life-saving medicine.
159[[/folder]]
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161[[folder:Western Animation]]
162* Since ''WesternAnimation/IlEtaitUneFois l'homme'' tells the story of Western civilization from prehistoric times to modern times, it's no surprise that the Black Death is inescapable. Specifically, it is shown in Episode 13, which is about UsefulNotes/TheHundredYearsWar.
163* ''WesternAnimation/ThePeriwigMaker'' is about a wig-maker in London during the Great Plague of 1665-66, who watches from his shop as, across the street, a little girl and her mother fall victim to the Black Death.
164[[/folder]]
165
166[[folder:Real Life]]
167* As has been noted elsewhere on this page, the plague is an entirely treatable illness these days (its effects have been likened to "a bad case of the flu with some pneumonia and chicken pox symptoms tossed in for good measure"). Ironically, this has led to the [[BlackComedy darkly humorous]] fact that, in modern industrialized first-world countries at least, the most common source of new plague outbreaks is the vaccination itself (about 1 in 1000 recipients of the plague vaccine actually contract the disease from getting vaccinated).
168* Contrasted with a well-known meme based on ''VideoGame/{{Pandemic}}'', the vast majority of modern plague outbreaks now happen in UsefulNotes/{{Madagascar}}, which suffers dozens of cases and several deaths every year. The last major outbreak was in 2017, when the disease caught the authorities by surprise by spreading to the urban population (through infected travelers) instead of staying in isolated rural areas as it previously did. Almost 2600 cases were officially counted, of which 221 died.
169[[/folder]]
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