𝕸 Crises

1066 Norman Conquest ..
Ж 1066 ..
Ж Black Death to Peasants' Revolt ..
Ж Medieval Warfare Ж ..
Ж Black Death - Impacts ..
ЖЉ Black Death - Jewish Persecution, Europe ..

536 CE - Worst .. 
927-7-12 Æthelstan declared rex totius Britanniae  
1224 ..
1315-1317 Great Famine ..
Causes of Death .. 
Great Famine of 1315-1317 ..

1224

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1224 - Why 1224 was the most politically unstable year in Europe - K&G > .

1066 Norman Conquest


On 6 January 1066 Harold Godwinson was crowned Harold II, the last Anglo-Saxon king of England.

Edward the Confessor had died the previous day, having suffered a series of strokes in late 1065 that caused him to lie in a coma for much of the remainder of his life. Edward died without an heir, and this sparked a succession crisis that culminated in the Norman invasion of England later that year.

The Normans claimed that Edward had promised the throne of England to William of Normandy. This is reported by various Norman chroniclers, and the Bayeux Tapestry even shows Harold swearing an oath on sacred relics to support William’s claim to the English throne after he was shipwrecked in 1064. The reliability of the Tapestry’s account is debated by historians, especially since it goes against the English tradition that the new king would be chosen by the Witenaġemot – the ‘meeting of wise men’.

Whatever the truth of Edward’s promise and Harold’s meeting with William, Edward apparently regained consciousness and entrusted his kingdom to Harold for ‘protection’ shortly before he died. When the Witenaġemot met on 6 January they elected Harold to be the new king, and his coronation took place the same day. Historians generally believe that this took place in Westminster Abbey, which had been built by Edward and was consecrated just a few days earlier on 28 December 1065.

Hearing of Harold’s accession to the English throne, William of Normandy soon began preparing to invade. Harold reigned for barely nine months before being killed at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October by the Norman invaders.

1066-12-25: William of Normandy = William the Conqueror, crowned King - HiPo > .

On 25th December 1066, William of Normandy was crowned King of England at Westminster Abbey.

William defeated the English king Harold II at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October 1066, but was forced to fight on after a number of English nobles nominated Edgar the Ætheling as the new king. When William led his Norman troops across the Thames at Wallingford in early December they were met by Stigand, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who just a few weeks earlier had elected Edgar as king. However, he immediately abandoned Edgar and submitted to William, who soon marched to Berkhamsted where Edgar himself gave up his claim to the throne.

William’s coronation in Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day saw both Norman and English nobility in attendance. Norman troops were stationed outside the Abbey and in the surrounding streets in case of trouble while the coronation itself was conducted by Geoffrey, the Bishop of Coutances, and Ealdred, the Archbishop of York. The account of Orderic Vitalis, the Anglo-French chronicler of Norman England, tells how the assembled nobles ‘shouted out with one voice’ when asked if they agreed to William becoming King of England.

The troops outside mistook these cheers for a fight between the Normans and English inside the church and set fire to some of the English houses nearby before charging into the Abbey itself. The arrival of the troops panicked the coronation guests, many of whom fled the Abbey while the bishops frantically finished the ceremony amid the commotion. After Edward the Confessor and Harold Godwinson, William became the third person to wear the crown of England that year.



14 October 1066 | The Brutal Battle that Killed King Harold of England 2:24
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jurwgaFyuLU

The Battle of Hastings 1066 - The Normans - BBC Two
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLy1LskT6Y8

1066, Normans, Domesday
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLtakTnKQQMCwAB8Aw_8oK_RK98FBvtnrq*

1066 Harald Hardrada

Harald Hardrada: Warrior King of Norway (Vikings Doc) > .

536 CE - Worst

.536: The Worst Year Ever - Side > .

Ж 1066


Viking Invasion & Norman Conquest of England 1066 - BazB >> .

Norman Conquest

Monarchy examines the history of kingship in England from William to Conqueror on through the House of Norman. William seizes the throne after the battle of Hastings and is crowned in Westminster Abbey in London. He suppresses the Anglo-Saxons and consolidates his holdings by building fortifications throughout England. William Rufus the second son of William the Conqueror becomes king after his father's death. Disliked by the Church for his irreligious ways, he is killed by an arrow while hunting in the New Forest. After his death, his brother Henry crowns himself king. He consolidates his power by reviving the popular traditions of the Anglo-Saxon kings. After the death of his son, Henry appoints his daughter Matilda as his successor but after his death his nephew Stephen seizes the throne. Eventually this sparks a civil war which ends when Stephen agrees to appoint her son Henry as the heir to the throne.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1021789/?ref_=ttep_ep3
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0431550/

For better, for worse - μόνος ἄρχω - monarchy
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs5H4V1x-xBiT1yW-MZLVGxc9mcIzzXPh
1066 a year to conquer england - Allthemed Docs 2
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1jaH3Hh_0mV-NG09RsoLU7BT4ndBzBat
1. 

Battles - Lewes 1264, Evesham 1265 CE

Henry III, Simon de Montfort (6th Earl of Leicester) - Second Barons' War

Lewes: Provision of Oxford, Edward Longshanks, Henry III captured, Mise of Lewes
Evesham: De Montfort's Parliament, Earl Gilbert de Clare, Simon the Younger, Llewelyn ap Gruffudd, de Montfort killed, Dictum of Kenilworth

The Battle of Lewes was one of two main battles of the conflict known as the Second Barons' War. It took place at Lewes in Sussex, on 14 May 1264. It marked the high point of the career of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, and made him the "uncrowned King of England". Henry III left the safety of Lewes Castle and St. Pancras Priory to engage the Barons in battle and was initially successful, his son Prince Edward routing part of the baronial army with a cavalry charge. However Edward pursued his quarry off the battlefield and left Henry's men exposed. Henry was forced to launch an infantry attack up Offham Hill where he was defeated by the barons' men defending the hilltop. The royalists fled back to the castle and priory and the King was forced to sign the Mise of Lewes, ceding many of his powers to Montfort.

The Battle of Evesham (4 August 1265) was one of the two main battles of 13th century England's Second Barons' War. With the Battle of Lewes, de Montfort had won control of royal government, but after the defection of several close allies and the escape from captivity of Prince Edward, he found himself on the defensive. Forced to engage the royalists at Evesham, he faced an army twice the size of his own. The battle took place on 4 August 1265, near the town of EveshamWorcestershire.

The battle soon turned into a massacre; Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, was killed and his body mutilated. This marked the defeat of  and the rebellious barons by the future King Edward I, who led the forces of his father, King Henry III. Though the battle effectively restored royal authority, scattered resistance remained until the Dictum of Kenilworth was signed in 1267.

Ж Black Death to Peasants' Revolt

A Day In the Life Living With the Plague > .  
Why Plague Doctors Wore Strange Masks > .
Pandemics Economically Worse than War - 1st Pandemic - Pandemic Hx 1 - tgh > .
Pandemics & the Economy | The Lasting Effects of the Black Death > .
How did Medieval People respond to the Black Death? - same > . 

How Eyam in Derbyshire 'self-isolated' during Bubonic Plague > .
Plague in the Ancient and Medieval World - same > .

Ж Black Death - Impacts

Why Were Jews Persecuted During the Black Death? - HiHe > .


The Siege of Caffa and the Scourge of the Bubonic Plague
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5tI8-8Fn8Y
Black Death Explained in 8 Minutes - CaHi > .

Black Death -- Economic Impacts
https://guidebookstgc.snagfilms.com/8241_BlackDeath.pdf

Black Death list:

Bubonic plague first swept Europe in the age of Justinian, in the sixth century, killing an estimated 25 million people in the Byzantine Empire and spreading further west. Its most devastating outbreak was in mid-fourteenth-century Europe, when it destroyed perhaps a third of the continent's population. Italian city-states pioneered the policies of quarantine and isolation that remained standard preventive measures for many centuries; religious revival and popular disturbances, crime and conflict may have spread as life was cheapened by the mass impact of the plague. The economic effects of the drastic reduction in population were severe, though not necessarily negative. Later outbreaks of the plague culminated in outbreaks in Seville (1647), London (1665), Vienna (1679) and Marseilles (1720) and then it disappeared from Europe while recurring in Asia through the nineteenth century. The plague set the template for many later confrontations with epidemic disease. Gresham College.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RArMJO4wVcg

Black Death - Statistics - (wills) International School History
Death rate = 16 x norm for 10 months = ~ 60% of 60,000 in London
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-p_eC6eNJN4

Curse of the Rat: The Black Death - History Documentary 2017
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j7aI-96SZXk

Secrets of the Great Plague - survival b/o immune system
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQ8JQZwiwWE

Black Death Spread - Europe - 1346 to 1351

Black Death First Spread: The First Wave Sweeps across Europe

https://guidebookstgc.snagfilms.com/8241_BlackDeath.pdf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Death_in_England

https://dogsharon.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/blackdeath.gif .

The Black Death in Walsham, Suffolk

ЖЉ Black Death - Jewish Persecution, Europe

.Life After the Black Death Ended - Weird > .

Black Death - Jewish Persecution, Europe

How did Medieval People respond to the Black Death? - same > . 

The arrival of the plague in medieval Europe marked the beginning of one of the most devastating events humanity had ever experienced. In the face of an implacable and unstoppable enemy for which there seemed no defense and no cure, people responded in just about every way you can imagine. Some people engaged in denial, some turned to religion, and some decided to party. But others looked for someone to blame—and they found their scapegoat in the Jewish communities that existed throughout the medieval world.

Anti-Semitism

https://guidebookstgc.snagfilms.com/8241_BlackDeath.pdf

Brunanburh 937 CE

Medieval Battles - BazB >> .

Ж Medieval Warfare Ж

System of Raising Armies and Campaigning: Medieval Warfare by Professor Michael Prestwich
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXXjmy0pYf4

Western Warfare in the Age of the Crusades 1 > .
Castle guard
https://youtu.be/BXXjmy0pYf4?t=26m20s
Castle-guard was an arrangement under the feudal system, by which the duty of finding knights to guard royal castles was imposed on certain manors, knight's fees or baronies. The greater barons provided for the guard of their castles by exacting a similar duty from their sub-enfeoffed knights. The obligation was commuted very early for a fixed money payment, a form of scutage known as "castle-guard rent", which lasted into modern times. Castle-guard was a common form of feudal tenure, almost ubiquitous, on the Isle of Wight where all manors were held from the Lord of the Isle of Wight, seated at Carisbrook Castle.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle-guard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knight%27s_fee
Medieval source material on the internet: Land taxes and feudal surveys
http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/sources/feudal.shtml
http://home.olemiss.edu/~tjray/medieval/feudal.htm .

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzq6MC4YzCQ



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sU06Yr5ZzRc

Viking Woodsman Kit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYV4FndGF0M

Irish & Viking Medieval Weapons & Armour On Display At Gallow's Hill, Dungarvan
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZqFj4HczRA

How to make fire with flint and steel - Viking Style Fire Lighting
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7D-0Af4Ve6o

Journeys Through Time 1 - The Vikings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jmwI55c1qXg

You Had to Be Strong Just to Wear the Armor as a Viking
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4Uw1g5MU_U

The Wilderness and Bushcraft Series - Bjorn Andreas Bull-Hansen
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL0sQ3n0iQgQJHffqgEGIgdZcJakZ0ae4v

Logistics in Medieval Warfare played a key role, although for a long time there was a view that there were no proper logistical system in the "Dark Ages", this has been largely debunked. Since large army operated for extended periods in enemy territory and we also have quite a paper trail in some cases. This video also covers the benefits and drawbacks of pack animals, carts and wagons. The difference between stall-feeding and grazing. The importance of militias and magnates. As well, as the basic differences to the Roman Empire and food requirements for men and beast.

▲ Warfare ➧ 
Ancient Warfare ➧
Anglo-Saxon vs Viking weaponry ➧
Bowmen ➧
English Military Decline, 14th C? ➧
Medieval Warfare ➧
Siege Engines ➧
Siege Tower ➧ (11thC BCE ancient Near East, 4thC BCE Europe ) 

Cooling - Medieval famine, plague, social change

Medieval cooling, famine, plague, social change

Long before the bitter cold winters and drenching rains of the early 14th century announced the end of the Medieval Warm Period (MWP), Europe had expanded dangerously close to the limits of its resources. Four centuries of unusually mild temperatures (the highest in 8,000 years), prompted the continent’s farmers to plant crops on vast quantities of land previously unsuitable for agriculture; the increased food supply in turn fueled a population explosion that tripled the number of people in medieval Europe.

Several causes have been proposed for climatic cooling: cyclical lows in solar radiation, heightened volcanic activity, changes in the ocean circulation, variations in Earth's orbit and axial tilt (orbital forcing), inherent variability in global climate, and decreases in the human population.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztninkgZ0ws

Higher April to July mean temperatures prevailed in the first decade of the fourteenth century, during the late 1320s and early 1330s, the 1350s and the 1390s. Lower temperatures marked the mid-1290s, about 1313 to 1323, the late 1330s and 1340s, the mid-1360s to the mid-1370s and the 1380s. Additionally the reconstruction reveals periods of high and low inter-annual variability in the spring and early summer temperatures. Between 1315 and 1335 as well as 1360–1375 the year to year variability was especially high: jumps in growing season temperatures from one year to the next were frequently reaching 1.5°C. Phases of medium inter-annual variability marked 1290–1315, about 1405–1411 and the early 1420s. Finally, during the second half of the 1330s and in the 1340s, in the 1350s, around 1380 and in the 1410s spring and early summer temperatures were comparatively stable.

1384
During this summer there was so great a drought that streams and springs which normally gushed from the ground in ceaseless flow, and indeed, as seemed yet more remarkable, even the deepest wells, all dried up. The drought lasted until the Nativity of the Virgin [8 September, Old Style]; […]. In the course of the summer the larger cattle died in very great numbers through the shortage of water.

The reconstructed April–July mean temperatures 1256–1431, based on grain harvest dates (Pribyl et al., 2012). The grey error bars represent ±2 S.E. (RMSE) derived from the regression analysis during the 1768–1816 calibration period.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/enhanced/figures/doi/10.1002/wea.2317#figure-viewer-wea2317-fig-0003

The impact of weather induced harvest failure in the Middle Ages is dependent on population density, infrastructure and the transport network, the storage capacity for grain, the access to other resources, the integration in wider trade networks and the capacity of the authorities to organise relief measures.

High inter-annual variability of the growing season -temperature alone could cause severe problems for medieval agriculture, as could periods of cold springs and summers that were often coupled with raised precipitation levels. So during the cold and variable 1310s the worst famine of the last millennium in northwestern Europe occurred 1315–1317, caused by incessant rains. In England 10% of the population are estimated to have fallen victim to this famine. During the 1360s grain prices remained high, even though the population loss due to recurrent plague waves reached at least 30% and hence lowered the demand for grain. Again, weather was cold and variable and high rainfall levels interfered with agricultural production. During the warm springs and early summers of the 1330s and 1410s grain prices were stable and generally low.

Extreme weather as well as long term climatic change could also influence land use and settlement patterns. Climate change also constituted a factor in the desertion of villages during the later Middle Ages. It is likely that in England desertions also took place in villages, where an unfavourable combination of climate and soil conditions rendered agriculture more vulnerable.

Famine in medieval England
http://www.medievalists.net/2015/12/20/approaches-to-famine-in-medieval-england/

14th C end of the Medieval Warm Period (MWP)

Borehole inversions indicate a globally coherent pattern of cooling from the Medieval Warm Period to the Little Ice Age that is also documented in recent land and ocean proxy compilations. The ocean adjusts to surface temperature anomalies over time scales greater than 1000 years in the deep Pacific, which suggests that it too hosts signals related to Common Era changes in surface climate.


Little Ice Age
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYdCE0SqrJM

1315-22 Wet summers, rinderpest, crop failure, famine, and decimation followed by the Great Pestilence and the Peasants' Revolt of 1381

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Ice_Age
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wea.2317/full
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Warm_Period
https://www.thedailybeast.com/when-the-weather-went-all-medieval-climate-change-famine-and-mass-death

Crises

Medieval Europe - Black Death > .
European History >> .

Epiphany Rising - Dec 1399 to January 1400

The Epiphany Rising was a failed rebellion against Henry IV of England in late December 1399 and early January 1400.

Richard II rewarded those who had supported him against Gloucester and the Lords Appellant with a plethora of new titles. Upon the usurpation and accession of King Henry IV in 1399, many of those titles were placed under attainder, due to the complicity of their holders in the murder of the Duke of Gloucester.

The ringleaders of the conspiracy were John Montagu, 3rd Earl of Salisbury, John Holland, 1st Earl of Huntingdon (formerly Duke of Exeter) and half-brother to Richard II, Thomas Holland, 3rd Earl of Kent (formerly Duke of Surrey), and Thomas le Despenser, 4th Baron le Despencer (formerly Earl of Gloucester). Other members included Edward of Norwich, 1st Earl of Rutland (formerly Duke of Aumale), Ralph Lumley, 1st Baron Lumley, Sir Thomas Blount and Sir Bernard Brocas. They met on 17 December 1399 at the Abbey house in Westminster and plotted to capture the new King Henry IV while he was at Windsor for the feast of Epiphany.

They hoped to seize the king during a tournament, kill him, and restore Richard II to the throne. However, Edward of Norwich betrayed the conspirators to King Henry, although according to Tait, contemporary English sources which describe the conspiracy make no mention of Rutland, and his role in it is open to doubt. Nevertheless, forewarned, Henry failed to appear at Windsor and began to raise an army in London. Kent and Salisbury arrived at the castle with a force of about 400 men-at-arms and archers, but hearing that the king, forewarned, was no longer there, quickly left.

The conspirators fled to the western counties and raised the standard of rebellion. However, they obtained little support and were quickly apprehended by local authorities. While attempting to seize Cirencester, Lumley was beheaded in a short but violent skirmish by the townsfolk and Salisbury and Kent were captured. Held briefly in custody, they were abruptly beheaded without trial on 7 January 1400. Le Despencer was captured at Bristol by a mob and was also summarily beheaded on 13 January 1400. Huntingdon was captured at Pleshey and dealt with likewise on 16 January 1400. Blount escaped to Oxford, where he was hanged, drawn and quartered on 12 January 1400. Brocas was captured in Cirencester and beheaded at Tyburn. Those executed were subsequently attainted in March; the brother of Kent and the sons of Salisbury and Huntingdon were later restored to their fathers' titles. The attainders were formally reversed in 1461 by a Yorkist parliament.

The rebellion also convinced Henry IV that a deposed, imprisoned and alive King Richard was a very dangerous liability for him. The deposed monarch would come to his death 'by means unknown' in Pontefract Castle by 17 February 1400.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphany_Rising

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_IV_of_England
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_II_of_England
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lords_Appellant
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attainder
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_of_Woodstock,_1st_Duke_of_Gloucester

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Montagu,_3rd_Earl_of_Salisbury
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Holland,_1st_Duke_of_Exeter
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Holland,_1st_Duke_of_Surrey
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_le_Despenser,_1st_Earl_of_Gloucester
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_of_Norwich,_2nd_Duke_of_York
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_de_Lumley,_1st_Baron_Lumley
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Blount_(died_1400)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Brocas_(rebel)

Photo



1642 English Civil War 1651

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Origins - Why English Civil War Happened - K&G > .
Britain Hasn't Always Had a Monarchy - Tom N > . skip > .
English Civil War - K&G >> .

The English Civil War (1642–1651) was a series of civil wars and political machinations between Parliamentarians ("Roundheads") and Royalists ("Cavaliers"), mainly over the manner of England's governance and issues of religious freedom. It was part of the wider Wars of the Three Kingdoms. The first (1642–1646) and second (1648–1649) wars pitted the supporters of King Charles I against the supporters of the Long Parliament, while the third (1649–1651) saw fighting between supporters of King Charles II and supporters of the Rump Parliament. The wars also involved the Scottish Covenanters and Irish Confederates. The war ended with Parliamentarian victory at the Battle of Worcester on 3 September 1651.

Unlike other civil wars in England, which were mainly fought over who should rule, these conflicts were also concerned with how the three Kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland should be governed. The outcome was threefold: the trial of and execution of Charles I (1649); the exile of his son, Charles II (1651); and the replacement of English monarchy with the Commonwealth of England, which from 1653 (as the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland) unified the British Isles under the personal rule of Oliver Cromwell (1653–1658) and briefly his son Richard (1658–1659). In England, the monopoly of the Church of England on Christian worship was ended, and in Ireland, the victors consolidated the established Protestant Ascendancy. Constitutionally, the outcome of the wars established the precedent that an English monarch cannot govern without Parliament's consent, though the idea of Parliamentary sovereignty was legally established only as part of the Glorious Revolution in 1688.

Great Pestilence

A Day In the Life Living With the Plague > .  
Why Plague Doctors Wore Strange Masks > . 
Pandemics Economically Worse than War - 1st Pandemic - Pandemic Hx 1 - tgh > .
How did Medieval People respond to the Black Death? - same > .
Black Death Explained in 8 Minutes - CaHi > .
Did The Black Death Affect Medieval Religion? Islam / Christianity ~ same >

Great Famine of 1315-1317

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Hell on Earth: The Great Famine of 1315-1317 - Craft > .

Great Northern War

.How Russia Became an Empire - Great Northern War - K&G > .

Between the years of 1560 and 1658, Sweden created a Baltic empire centred on the Gulf of Finland and comprising the provinces of Karelia, Ingria, Estonia, and Livonia. During the Thirty Years' War Sweden gained tracts in Germany as well, including Western Pomerania, Wismar, the Duchy of Bremen, and Verden. During the same period, Sweden conquered Danish and Norwegian provinces north of the Sound (1645; 1658). These victories may be ascribed to a well-trained army, which despite its comparatively small size, was far more professional than most continental armies, and also to a modernization of administration (both civilian and military) in the course of the 17th century, which enabled the monarchy to harness the resources of the country and its empire in an effective way. Fighting in the field, the Swedish army (which during the Thirty Years' War contained more German and Scottish mercenaries than ethnic Swedes, but was administered by the Swedish Crown[18]) was able, in particular, to make quick, sustained marches across large tracts of land and to maintain a high rate of small arms fire due to proficient military drill.

However, the Swedish state ultimately proved unable to support and maintain its army in a prolonged war. Campaigns on the continent had been proposed on the basis that the army would be financially self-supporting through plunder and taxation of newly gained land, a concept shared by most major powers of the period. The cost of the warfare proved to be much higher than the occupied countries could fund, and Sweden's coffers and resources in manpower were eventually drained in the course of long conflicts.

The foreign interventions in Russia during the Time of Troubles resulted in Swedish gains in the Treaty of Stolbovo (1617). The treaty deprived Russia of direct access to the Baltic Sea. Russian fortunes began to reverse in the final years of the 17th century, notably with the rise to power of Peter the Great, who looked to address the earlier losses and re-establish a Baltic presence. In the late 1690s, the adventurer Johann Patkul managed to ally Russia with Denmark and Saxony by the secret Treaty of Preobrazhenskoye, and in 1700 the three powers attacked.

The Great Northern War (1700–1721) was a conflict in which a coalition led by the Tsardom of Russia successfully contested the supremacy of the Swedish Empire in Northern, Central and Eastern Europe. The initial leaders of the anti-Swedish alliance were Peter I of Russia, Frederick IV of Denmark–Norway and Augustus II the Strong of SaxonyPoland–Lithuania. Frederick IV and Augustus II were defeated by Sweden, under Charles XII, and forced out of the alliance in 1700 and 1706 respectively, but rejoined it in 1709 after the defeat of Charles XII at the Battle of Poltava. George I of Great Britain and the Electorate of Hanover joined the coalition in 1714 for Hanover and in 1717 for Britain, and Frederick William I of Brandenburg-Prussia joined it in 1715.

History of Pandemics

How Pandemics Spread > .
A Day In the Life Living With the Plague > .  
Why (17thC+) Plague Doctors Wore Strange Masks > .

How Eyam in Derbyshire 'self-isolated' during Bubonic Plague > .
Plague in the Ancient and Medieval World - same > .
The Peasants' Revolt (The Great Revolt) - HiHu >> .

Plague writers who "predicted" coronavirus pandemic .  

In the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, some plague doctors and physicians wore a beak-like mask which was filled with aromatic items. The masks were designed to protect them from putrid air, which (according to the miasmatic theory of disease) was seen as the cause of infection. The design of these clothes has been attributed to Charles de Lorme, the chief physician to Louis XIII.