The Black Death ravaged Europe in the middle of the 14th century, killing as much as half of the population in some areas. Many experts have thought the plague was so deadly that it killed indiscriminately, taking the strong as often as the weak, but new research is challenging that notion.
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The Black Death ravaged Europe in the middle of the 14th century, killing as much as half of the population in some areas. Many experts have thought the plague was so deadly that it killed indiscriminately, taking the strong as often as the weak, but new research is challenging that notion.