FRIAS Kolloquium - F. C. Ljungqvist
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Wann |
30.10.2023 von 15:00 bis 16:00 |
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Wo | FRIAS Seminar Room |
Name | Event Team |
Termin übernehmen |
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Climate Variability and Food (In)Security in Medieval and Early Modern Europe
The talk provides an overview of recent scholarship, including my own studies, on food insecurity and famines in Europe during the medieval and early modern periods (c. 700–1800). Focus is placed on how, and to what extent, climatic change and variability can explain the occurrence and severity of food shortages and famines during the period. The talk also addresses the challenge of even identifying famine events in the pre-modern era. Current research, supported by recent advances in palaeoclimatology, has revealed that anomalous cold conditions were the main environmental backdrop for severe food production crises that could result in famines in pre-industrial Europe. Such food crises occurred most frequently between c. 1550 and 1710 during the climax of the Little Ice Age cooling. They can, to a large extent, be connected to the strong dependency on grain in Europe during this period and the limited possibility for long-distance transportation of bulk goods in inland regions. The available body of scholarship demonstrates that famines in medieval and early modern Europe can be best understood as the result of the interactions of climatic and societal stressors responding to pre-existing societal vulnerabilities. The talk concludes with summarising research gaps and provides some recommendations for future studies on historical food shortages and famines.