1033
Famine sweeps Latin Europe
Bad harvests and relentless rain brought a millennial famine that chroniclers likened to the apocalypse itself. Rodulfus Glaber described cannibalism in French markets, bodies stacked in pits, and monks abandoning their cloisters. The calamity coincided with the thousand-year anniversary of Christ's passion and fed apocalyptic preaching. When the rains finally stopped and harvests recovered, Glaber wrote, the whole world seemed to shake itself and don a white robe of new churches.
Song court commissions encyclopedia of materia medica
Emperor Renzong ordered a comprehensive revision of the imperial pharmacopoeia, dispatching scholars to catalog medicinal plants, minerals, and animal products from every province. The resulting Jiayou Materia Medica described over a thousand substances with their properties and preparations, systematizing Chinese medical knowledge and serving physicians for generations as the standard reference.
Ly Thai Tong establishes Vietnamese civil examinations
The Vietnamese king introduced a civil examination system modeled on China's, opening government service to educated commoners for the first time. The exams tested knowledge of Confucian classics, Buddhist scriptures, and literary composition. Though modest in scale compared to Song China's massive bureaucracy, the system laid the foundation for Vietnam's distinctive scholar-official tradition.
Drought devastates the Sahel
A prolonged drought struck the grasslands south of the Sahara, stressing the pastoral communities of the western Sudan and weakening the agricultural base of the Ghana Empire. Herders pushed southward into the forest margins in search of water and pasture, accelerating the population movements that would reshape West African political geography in the coming century.