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Nov 8, 2022 · How did climate change affect the economic and political history of the Byzantine Empire? Learn how warming and cooling periods influenced crop production, territorial expansion, and weather catastrophes in Byzantium.
Historians understand causal relationships from the point of view of multiple interrelated social, economic, and political factors, whereas climate scientists think in terms of environmental impacts on agriculture, warfare, demographics, and long-term stability.
Mar 15, 2016 · At the beginning of the Medieval Climate Anomaly, in the ninth and tenth century, the medieval eastern Roman empire, more usually known as Byzantium, was recovering from its early medieval crisis and experiencing favourable climatic conditions for the agricultural and demographic growth.
- Elena Xoplaki, Dominik Fleitmann, Juerg Luterbacher, Sebastian Wagner, John F. Haldon, Eduardo Zorit...
- 2016
Aug 1, 2014 · The Anatolian case challenges a number of assumptions about the impact of climatic factors on socio-political organization and medium-term historical evolution, highlighting the importance of further collaboration between historians, archaeologists, and climate scientists.
- John Haldon, Neil Roberts, Adam Izdebski, Dominik Fleitmann, Michael McCormick, Marica Cassis, Owen ...
- 2014
Meteorology in Byzantium involved not only the theoretical approaches included in philosophical and theological texts, but also offered practical forecasts included in weather lore and other accounts that did not conform to scientific and religious explanations.
- Ioannis Telelis
Jan 1, 2005 · At the beginning of the Medieval Climate Anomaly, in the ninth and tenth century, the medieval eastern Roman empire, more usually known as Byzantium, was recovering from its early medieval crisis...
Xoplaki, E. et al.(2015) ‘The Medieval Climate Anomaly and Byzantium: A review of the evidence on climatic fluctuations, economic performance and societal change’, Quaternary Science Reviews. Fig. 5. Summary of agricultural production in Anatolia according to pollen data ca 300-900 CE (Haldon et al. 2014) century (Fig. 4). This is a pattern