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GLOBAL CLIMATES, THE 1257 MEGA-ERUPTION OF SAMALAS VOLCANO, INDONESIA, AND THE ENGLISH FOOD CRISIS OF 1258*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 November 2017
Abstract
In 1258, as baronial opposition to Henry III erupted and the government became locked in constitutional conflict, the country found itself in the grip of a serious food crisis. To blame was a run of bad weather and failed harvests. Thousands of famished famine refugees flocked to London in quest of food and charity, where many of them perished and were buried in mass graves. The multiple burials recently discovered and excavated in the cemetery of the hospital of St Mary Spital highlight the plight of the poor at this time of political turmoil. Was their fate part of a global catastrophe precipitated by the VEI7 explosion of Samalas Volcano, Indonesia, the previous year or was powerful solar forcing of global climates responsible for the unusually unstable weather? The answer depends in large measure upon establishing the precise chronology of how the crisis unfolded, drawing upon the surviving documentary record of prices and harvests, the comments of contemporary chroniclers and a range of high-resolution palaeo-climatic proxies. Reexamination of this episode illustrates the potential of environmental history to shed fresh light on familiar historical events and its capacity to place them in a global environmental context.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © Royal Historical Society 2017
Footnotes
This paper is dedicated to Christine Beavon. Christopher Whittick provided invaluable assistance with the Latin chronicles, Richard Cassidy alerted me to relevant entries in the close and patent rolls, Francis Ludlow advised on the 1252 drought and, with Mike Baillie, contributed dendrochronological data.
References
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85 Keene, ‘Crisis Management’, 54; MOLA, ‘Cataclysmic Volcano’.
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90 Oppenheimer, Eruptions, 54–66.
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94 Paris's English History, iii, 312; Chronica Majora, v, 728; Britton, Meteorological Chronology, 108.
95 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office: Henry III 1258–66 (1910), 73; Close Rolls, iv: a.d. 1259–1261 (1934), 52, 172.
96 Annales monastici, iv (Annals of Oseney), 127. And in spring 1261, the baronial council observed that the kingdom had been impoverished by ‘evil years’: Documents of the Baronial Movement of Reform and Rebellion, 1258–1267 Selected by R. E. (i.e. R. F.) Treharne, ed. I. J. Sanders (Oxford, 1973), 221.
97 Campbell, Great Transition, 38–58.
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101 Ibid ., 64–81; D. A. Carpenter, The Reign of Henry III (1996), 183–98.
102 Paris's English History, iii, 265–6; Chronica Majora, v, 673–4.
103 Keene, ‘Crisis Management’, 56.
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