Abstract:Palaeoclimatic data are used to track the significant changes in atmospheric circulation patterns and weather conditions that affected Ireland between 1000 and 1500 CE. How these climatic developments and associated shifts in the epidemiological environment were mapped onto Irish society is explored using a tree-ring chronology reflecting the retreat and advance of oak woodland. Years characterised by significant weather-related food scarcities are identified from the Gaelic and Anglo-Irish Annals in combination with the independent record of English chronicles, grain yields and prices. Between the thirteenth and the fifteenth centuries the experience of the two countries is shown to have diverged. It is suggested that in late-medieval Ireland scarcity heightened the resort to violence and from 1348 was often a proximate cause of plague outbreaks. In combination, scarcity, violence and plague helped entrap fifteenth-century society in a low-level equilibrium of sparse population, economic underdevelopment, scarcely disguised poverty and low resilience to natural hazards.
Climate, disease and society in late-medieval Ireland
Published 2021 in Climate and society in Ireland
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
2021
- Venue
Climate and society in Ireland
- Publication date
2021-06-07
- Fields of study
Environmental Science, History
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar
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