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Not Even Past

Episode 44: Climate Change and World History

What do a failed war by the Ottomans against the Hapsburg Empire, a rural rebellion in eastern Anatolia, the disappearance of the Roanoke colony, and near starvation at Jamestown, Santa Fe, and Quebec City have in common? They all take place during a period of global cooling known as the Little Ice Age, which brought extreme climate conditions, drought, heavy winters, and contributed to rising fuel prices, failing crops and massive civil unrest in places as diverse as North America and the Middle East.

Guest Sam White from Ohio State University makes the convincing argument that environmental and climactic factors are as influential in human history as economic, social, political, and cultural factors, and suggests a cautionary tale for human history as it enters another period of climate change.

Related posts:

Episode 51: Islam’s Enigmatic Origins Episode 63: Ezra and the Compilation of the Pentateuch Default ThumbnailEpisode 96: Louis XIV’s Absolutism and the “Affair of the Poisons” Default ThumbnailEpisode 70: Slavery and Abolition in Iran

Posted February 25, 2014 More 15 Minute History, Watch & Listen

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