75. Crime Rise in the Great Famine, Europe 1315-1322

Stories of cannibalism, infanticide, and child abandonment in the Great Famine were rife then, and continue now. The crime rate rose, certainly, but the more lurid stories haven’t much evidence behind them. However. The child abandonment story came down to us as Hansel and Gretel. (Illustration by Kay Neilsen, 1925.)

In 1315, the crops throughout Europe failed. And then they failed the year after that. And then the year after that. It was raining.  And it rained and rained and rained. After that , it rained some more. One of the greatest natural disasters of the middle ages was the Great Famine, in which so many people of Europe died that the population didn’t reach the level it had been before the rain started until the 19th century. Naturally, the crime rate rose. That’s a fact. However, the cannibalism and infanticide stories, though they were very well known, don’t have any evidence. Despite Hansel and Gretel. So we figured there was a rise in theft, and a rise in piracy, but not widespread cannibalism.  Michelle found a very good book. And a very bad one.

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