High Middle Ages · Europe · Disaster

1287

St Lucia's Flood drowns northern Europe

1287

In December, a catastrophic storm surge broke dikes along the North Sea coast of Frisia and the Netherlands. Tens of thousands drowned; the Zuiderzee was enlarged and new islands formed. It was among the deadliest natural disasters of the medieval era. The flood reshaped the coastline permanently and forced the surviving communities to develop the sophisticated water management techniques that would define Dutch civilization.