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The high-medieval demographic and economic growth in which fishers and their customers shared had detectable environmental consequences. Prevailing agricultural practices plus increased human and other wastes damaged river systems and polluted both flowing and still waters. Contemporaries were aware of some such effects; others emerge only in modern scientific archaeology. Rulers and others blamed perceived declines in the quantity and quality of fish on overfishing. Present-day studies of long-running assemblages of fish remains detect local depletion of favoured varieties and shrinking average size of more common species. Some fishes (eel) and some fisheries (for herring) of previously limited importance increased their contribution to European diets. An exotic species, common carp, hitherto present in Europe only in the lower Danube, spread westwards into waters made warmer and siltier by human activities. In large thirteenth-century assemblages (but with regional variations), more accessible herring, eel, codfishes, and small cyprinids become dominant. Not all change had human origin; natural dynamics also played a role. High medieval centuries saw the crest, then decline, of climatic warming, with concomitant regional differences in precipitation, seasonality, riverine and estuarine hydrology, and even shifts in stratification and water chemistry of the Baltic. Changed habitats let heat-tolerant fishes spread west, while a herring-dominated regime in the Baltic peaked and slowly yielded to greater presence of cod. Knowingly or not, humans and animals had to adapt.
The position of fishing in the European economy changed substantially during the early modern period. This chapter focuses on elucidating the general relationships and constraints which moulded the fishing industry and the fish trade, and the general fortunes of the cod and herring industries, rather than technical considerations. Every type of fishery is subject to enormous fluctuations in the catch. Winds and fluctuating temperatures add to the natural hazards, not just during the fishing period itself, but during the whole life cycle of the fish. In most ranges of economic activity in Europe there is evidence of a dual economy. Donald Coleman has pointed this out in relation to the cloth industry, and further investigation would shed light on its action in many other spheres. The chapter discusses Scottish herring fishery, English herring industry, Dutch herring fishery, French herring fishery, cod fishery, whale fishery, pilchard fishery and mackerel fishery.
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