This educational video provides a comprehensive overview of the Black Death (Bubonic Plague) and its profound impact on medieval Europe. It traces the origins of the plague from Asia along the Silk Road, explains the biological transmission through fleas and rats, and details how trade routes facilitated its rapid spread across the continent. The narrative uses maps and animations to visualize the trajectory of the disease from coastal ports to inland cities. Beyond the biology and timeline, the video deeply explores the social, economic, and cultural transformations triggered by the pandemic. It examines how the massive loss of life paradoxically led to better wages and rights for peasants, shifted power from kings to local governments, and sparked advancements in medicine, sanitation, and education. The content addresses misconceptions of the time, such as the miasma theory, and connects these historical events to the eventual rise of the Renaissance. This resource is highly valuable for history and social studies classrooms as it moves beyond just the "horror" of the plague to analyze its long-term structural effects on civilization. It offers excellent opportunities to teach cause-and-effect relationships in history, the intersection of biology and geography, and basic economic principles like supply and demand in a labor shortage. The concluding comparison to modern healthcare challenges makes the history relevant to contemporary students.