The Third Horseman
The Third Horseman
Climate Change and the Great Famine of the 14th Century
Ratings2
Average rating4
Pros: lots of information, political components told like a story with digressions on economics, weather, etc.,
Cons: I personally found the weather talk - though essential to the subject of the book - dryly told and boringly technical
This is an examination of the effects of the end of the medieval warm period during the reign of King Edward II of England. The book gives some background into the population explosion and increased farming that took place during the 400 hundred years when Europe experienced warmer temperatures (including the Viking expansion into Greenland), before delving into the political trials England faced at the time. Much of the book is given over to the war between England and Scotland and how it affected politics (Scotland allied with France at times to force England to back off) and economics (Scotland raided the English border over and over again, forcing the king to raise armies, draining his coffers). Two chapters - of particular interest to me - detailed the effects of the wet, cold weather on crops and the diseases that accompanied the resulting famines, decimating herds across England and the Continent.
While I found some of the weather discourse too technical and therefore boring, the rest of the book was very readable and fascinating.
If you're interested in how politics and the weather can combine to created a famine, and what else famine brings with it, this is a great book. Similarly, if the politics of England and Scotland or the lives and times of Edward the first and, predominantly the second, interest you, then definitely give this book a go.