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You couldn't possibly be more wrong. In Europe in the Middle Ages, one of the leading causes of death was by bear, wolf, boar or other wild animal attack. And less than 100 years ago, Indian tigers were still killing and eating a thousand people a year -- often small children, snatched directly from their homes. Even smaller animals such as foxes, stoats, weasels, civets, deer -- could indirectly cause death through malnourishment and even starvation through herd predation and crop destruction. Insect infestations were once so feared for their ability to destroy crops that they were considered deadly plagues from God himself.
The entire reason you have plenty of food and free time today to sling a backpack and safely roam through the "nurturing trails of nature" today is because of how much of the original wildlife we've killed.
Bolded part is patently untrue. In a science forum we use evidence and that, unfortunately, comes from what evidence is recorded. In that scenario, wild animals are so far down the list it's insignificant.
Plague, childbirth, disease, famine, etc, etc are the historically recorded issues--and they're well known--they still kill plenty of people today in third world countries. Hunting did kill people but it's considered the dangers of hunting itself (falling from horse, self-inflcited wounds) were as bad as being mauled by a stag.
However, yes, bugs kill many, many people (through the disease they spread).
Just two sources I could quickly find.
Plague, famine and sudden death: 10 dangers of the medieval period
It was one of the most exciting, turbulent and transformative eras in history, but the Middle Ages were also fraught with danger. Historian Dr Katharine Olson reveals 10 of the biggest risks people faced…
www.historyextra.com
Infant and child death due to varied causes had the greatest impact upon population and health, followed by a range of chronic/infectious diseases, with tuberculosis probably being the next most significant one.
Among medieval health problems, we estimate that plague was probably 7th–10th in overall importance. Although lethal and disruptive, it struck only periodically and had less cumulative long-term human consequences than chronically endemic conditions (e.g. bacterial and viral infections causing infant and child death, tuberculosis, and other pathogens).