https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg#/ ... dechen.jpg
I know black death is blamed on flee carrying rats, but looking at pattens, I think there is nothing new about man-made pandemics, it is a way to steal wealth. It always seems to be the walled cities that suffer from mass death and great fires, and what do we see, Hamburg is another walled city. Personally, I think it is more likely the water supply was poisoned, and when plague was declared, it is of historical record, cities were locked down and people trying to escape were killed. So nobody gets out, they have to drink the water, they get poisoned, only the people with the strongest constitutions survive.In 834, Hamburg was designated as the seat of a bishopric. The first bishop, Ansgar, became known as the Apostle of the North. Two years later, Hamburg was united with Bremen as the Bishopric of Hamburg-Bremen.
Hamburg was destroyed and occupied several times. In 845, 600 Viking ships sailed up the River Elbe and destroyed Hamburg, at that time a town of around 500 inhabitants. In 1030, King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland burned down the city. Valdemar II of Denmark raided and occupied Hamburg in 1201 and in 1214. The Black Death killed at least 60% of the population in 1350. Hamburg experienced several great fires in the medieval period.
In London there was the Black Death of 1665, where apparently a fifth of the population were killed, followed by 1666, where all the places those dead people were living were burned down to the ground. And that was all under King Charles II, directly after Oliver Cromwell. The naming convention for Kings we are currently on doesn't bode well.
https://historycollection.com/thousands ... in-london/
But back to wiki and Hamburg and the thing that actually caught my eye.From 1665 to 1666, London, England suffered an outbreak of the deadly Bubonic plague known as the Black Death. Over 100,000 people began to develop huge sores and black spots all over their body. They coughed up blood from their lungs, and died within just a few days. One-fifth of the city’s entire population had died, and there were so many bodies that piled up, they had to be picked up off the street and pushed in carts to be dumped in mass graves.
Hamburg connection to London in 1266. I'll throw this Bible study in here, Chris Sparks is quite interesting, he is a flat-earther, here he gives a study on Babylon through the ages and sun worship.In 1189, by imperial charter, Frederick I "Barbarossa" granted Hamburg the status of a Free Imperial City and tax-free access (or free-trade zone) up the Lower Elbe into the North Sea. In 1265, an allegedly forged letter was presented to or by the Rath of Hamburg. This charter, along with Hamburg's proximity to the main trade routes of the North Sea and Baltic Sea, quickly made it a major port in Northern Europe. Its trade alliance with Lübeck in 1241 marks the origin and core of the powerful Hanseatic League of trading cities. On 8 November 1266, a contract between Henry III and Hamburg's traders allowed them to establish a hanse in London. This was the first time in history that the word hanse was used for the trading guild of the Hanseatic League. In 1270, the solicitor of the senate of Hamburg, Jordan von Boitzenburg, wrote the first description of civil, criminal and procedural law for a city in Germany in the German language, the Ordeelbook (Ordeel: sentence). On 10 August 1410, civil unrest forced a compromise (German: Rezeß, literally meaning: withdrawal). This is considered the first constitution of Hamburg.
The Sorceries of Babylon - Chris Sparks