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Could volcanic eruptions have caused the Black Death to come to Europe

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Could volcanic eruptions have caused the Black Death to come to Europe

Researchers from the University of Cambridge and the Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe (GWZO) in Leipzig have used a combination of climate data and documentary evidence to paint the most complete picture to date of the "perfect storm" that led to the deaths of tens of millions of people, as well as profound demographic, economic, political, cultural and religious change.

Their evidence suggests that a volcanic eruption—or cluster of eruptions—around 1345 caused annual temperatures to drop for consecutive years due to the haze from volcanic ash and gases, which in turn caused crops to fail across the Mediterranean region. To avoid riots or starvation, Italian city states used their connections to trade with grain producers around the Black Sea.

This climate-driven change in long-distance trade routes helped avoid famine, but in addition to life-saving food, the ships were carrying the deadly bacterium that ultimately caused the Black Death, enabling the first and deadliest wave of the second plague pandemic to gain a foothold in Europe.

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