中世纪和近代早期欧洲的饥荒:气候与社会的联系

Fredrik Charpentier Ljungqvist, Andrea Seim, Dominik Collet
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摘要

摘要:本文评价了最近关于中世纪和近代早期欧洲饥荒的学术研究。700-1800),综合最新的知识,并确定研究差距和跨学科潜力。特别关注的是如何以及在多大程度上,气候变化和可变性在饥荒的因果关系中被赋予解释力。在古气候学最新进展的支持下,目前的研究表明,异常寒冷条件构成了严重粮食生产危机的主要环境背景,可能导致工业化前欧洲的饥荒。这类粮食危机最常发生在1990年至1990年之间。1550年和1710年,在小冰期降温的高潮期间,可以与这一时期欧洲对粮食的强烈依赖有关。现有的学术研究表明,中世纪和近代早期欧洲的饥荒可以最好地理解为气候和社会压力源对预先存在的脆弱性作出反应的相互作用的结果。最近的研究表明,社会对这些饥荒的反应及其后果的挪用,比以前认为的要全面、动态和实质性得多。文章最后提出了对未来历史饥荒研究的建议。本文分类如下:气候、历史、社会、文化和;主要历史时代气候、历史、社会、文化;学科展望:古气候与当前趋势古气候
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Famines in medieval and early modern Europe—Connecting climate and society

Famines in medieval and early modern Europe—Connecting climate and society
Abstract The article evaluates recent scholarship on famines in Europe during the medieval and early modern periods ( c . 700–1800), synthesizing the state‐of‐the‐art knowledge and identifying both research gaps and interdisciplinary potentials. Particular focus is placed on how , and to what extent , climatic change and variability is given explanatory power in famine causation. Current research, supported by recent advances in palaeoclimatology, reveals that anomalous cold conditions constituted 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, and can be connected to the strong dependency on grain in Europe during this period. The available body of scholarship demonstrates that famines in medieval and early modern Europe best can be understood as the result of the interactions of climatic and societal stressors responding to pre‐existing vulnerabilities. Recent research has shown that societal responses to these famines, and the appropriation of their consequences, have been much more comprehensive, dynamic, and substantial than previously assumed. The article concludes by providing recommendations for future studies on historical famines. This article is categorized under: Climate, History, Society, Culture > Major Historical Eras Climate, History, Society, Culture > Disciplinary Perspectives Paleoclimates and Current Trends > Paleoclimate
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