The Plague: The Feudal System In Northern Europe

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People and ideas represents how the people living in Europe received new ideas and philosophies outside of what the church said as time passed. From The Plague to The Enlightenment, people went from automatically believing in the church's word to question what they were saying. In order for society to survive, they needed to find new solutions and ways to survive besides praying.

The widespread epidemic of the bubonic plague weakened the mindset of trying to fix everything by praying through doubt about this being a good solution and started a resentment of the feudal system, which gave very little opportunity to the lower castes to spread their ideas and beliefs, within the serfs, as shown by events making the caste system less relevant such as the French Revolution and the rights of the Magna Carta later being applied to all citizens. After over 33% of the Northern European population died, people started trying to come up for solutions outside in order to survive-from burning corpses to looking for cures instead of praying and looking upon greater powers for support.
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It also encouraged people to take their one stances on events such as political and religious debates, which increased the number of viewpoints, and in order for the government to keep the people appeased, they had to at least pretend to approve of these new ways of thinking, or there may be dissent and protests like with the Protestant Reformation in