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In 1348 the Black Death reached England. Within two years, up to half the population was gone – not from war or famine, but from a disease no one understood and almost no one could treat. This video uses AI reconstruction to show what it took to survive the Black Death in England between 1348 and 1351: how the plague attacked the body, what medieval medicine tried to do about it, and how a few people lived while so many died. What you’ll learn in this documentary How Yersinia pestis caused bubonic, pneumonic and septicaemic plague in medieval England What ordinary people believed about “bad air”, sin, divine punishment and miasma How medieval medicine used bleeding, purging, herbal remedies, quarantine and prayer Why those treatments failed against an infection spread by rats, fleas, breath and blood How priests, physicians and barber‑surgeons faced the disease on the front line Why some people survived – genetics, chance, isolation and simple practical habits How labour shortages, rising wages and new laws like the Statute of Labourers reshaped feudal England How the Black Death changed faith, psychology, public health and everyday life for centuries This is a source‑driven medieval history documentary, combining AI‑generated visuals with the latest research into plague, pandemics and medieval society. Sources and references This documentary is built from current historical and scientific research, including: Ole J. Benedictow – The Black Death 1346–1353: The Complete History John Hatcher – Plague, Population and the English Economy 1348–1530 Robert S. Gottfried – The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe John Aberth – The Black Death: The Great Mortality of 1348–1350 East Smithfield plague pit excavations (Museum of London Archaeology) EH.net – “The Economic Impact of the Black Death” Modern DNA studies confirming Yersinia pestis as the cause of the Black Death Research on medieval English society, medicine, the Church and rural villages If you want more AI‑reconstructed medieval history, black‑death documentaries and deep dives into how pandemics changed the world, subscribe and turn on notifications. There is much more to come. #BlackDeath #MedievalHistory #HistoryDocumentary #AIReconstruction