Late Middle Ages · Europe · Disaster
1319
Great Famine devastates the Baltic grain trade
1319
The relentless rains that had drowned harvests across northern Europe since 1315 reached their peak of misery. Villages from Ireland to Poland reported cannibalism. The Hanseatic grain trade collapsed, salt production faltered, and livestock died of murrain by the thousands. The population of northern Europe contracted by a tenth before the skies cleared in 1322.