Documentary Evidence on Climate in Sixteenth-Century Europe

被引:0
作者
Christian Pfister
Rudolf Brázdil
Rüdiger Glaser
Mariano Barriendos
Dario Camuffo
Mathias Deutsch
Petr Dobrovolný
Silvia Enzi
Emanuela Guidoboni
Oldřich Kotyza
Stefan Militzer
Lajos Rácz
Fernando S. Rodrigo
机构
[1] University of Bern,Institute of History
[2] Masaryk University,Department of Geography
[3] University of Würzburg,Institute of Geography
[4] University of Barcelona,Department of Physical Geography
[5] CNR-ICTIMA,Institute of Prehistoric Archaeology
[6] University of Halle-Wittenberg,Storia Geofisica Ambiente
[7] CNR-ISDGM,Center of Regional Studies
[8] SGA,Department of Applied Physics
[9] Museum of Local History,undefined
[10] Hungarian Academy of Sciences,undefined
[11] University of Almería,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 1999年 / 43卷
关键词
Czech Republic; Natural Disaster; Extreme Event; Sixteenth Century; Proxy Data;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The known documentary climatic evidence from six European countries - Switzerland, Germany, the Czech Republic, ancient Hungary, Italy and Spain - is presented and classified in this article and then further analyzed in subsequent papers included in this volume. The sixteenth century witnessed an increase in the number and variety of sources in Switzerland, Germany and the Czech Republic as well as in the western and northern parts of ancient Hungary (present Slovakia). In northern Italy, the relevant sources are more abundant and widespread than in central Europe, but they have hardly been explored. Town chronicles written by members of the literate elite comprise the basic type of evidence in central Europe (including northern Italy and Hungary). This kind of source reports exceptional climatic events (e.g. anomalies and natural disasters) along with their impact on the environment and on society. Documentary data are the only evidence known to exist for reconstructing time series of natural disasters prior to the twentieth century. In order to document the extreme character of an event, chroniclers frequently referred to features in the cryosphere, biosphere or hydrosphere that were known to be more accurate yardsticks of temperature and precipitation patterns than subjective impressions. When records of such events are compiled with the description of some of the known effects, the results can be transformed into a severity index. Whereas chroniclers usually focused upon extreme events, long, continuous and seemingly homogeneous series of different kinds of proxy data are drawn from administrative records. Most of them are connected to the timing of certain kinds of agricultural work (hay-making, beginning of grain harvest or vintage) or to the amount and quality of agricultural production (per hectare yield of vineyards, sugar content of wine, etc.). In most cases the timing of these works was found to be directly related to temperature patterns over the preceding months and weeks.
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页码:55 / 110
页数:55
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