Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Famine
Episode Date: January 14, 2025One of the most devastating disasters that has afflicted humanity are famines. Unlike other natural disasters, famines do not have a single cause. They have happened all over the world for a wide va...riety of reasons; some of them have natural causes, and others are man-made. Famines are typically much worse than natural disasters and are rivaled only by pandemics and wars. Learn more about famines, their causes, and how they devastated humanity throughout history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed MasterClass Get up to 50% off at MASTERCLASS.COM/EVERYWHERE Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! ButcherBox New users that sign up for ButcherBox will receive 2 lbs of grass-fed ground beef in every box for the lifetime of their subscription + $20 off your first box when you use code daily at checkout! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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One of the most devastating disasters that has afflicted humanity are famines.
Unlike other natural disasters, famines do not have a single cause.
They've happened all over the world for a wide variety of reasons.
Some of them have natural causes and others are man-made.
Famines are typically much worse than natural disasters and are rivaled only by pandemics and wars.
Learn more about famines, their causes and how they've devastated humanity throughout history
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
The genesis of this episode came from my efforts to come up the list of the worst things that have ever happened to hear.
humans in history. I've found lists of the greatest disasters ever to impact humanity,
and on that list were a lot of pandemics, natural disasters, and famines.
I've covered some of these in the past, and I'll be covering more of these in the future,
as they've had an enormous impact on world history. However, famines are very different
than, say, an earthquake or an outbreak of a disease. I don't want to say that every natural
disaster or pandemic is the same, as they're obviously not, but
they are very different than famines.
A famine can be the result of several different possible events.
You can prepare for a natural disaster, but you can't usually prevent it from happening.
Famines, on the other hand, are often totally preventable.
Also, unlike natural disasters, famines have become more and more rare as we have mastered
the production and distribution of food.
So let's start by defining what a famine is.
A famine is just a severe and widespread shortage.
of food, leading to acute hunger, starvation, malnutrition, and often death.
The concept is pretty simple, but the circumstances surrounding them are not.
Famines, as they are understood today, didn't really exist in the same way before the advent
of agriculture.
In hunter-gatherer societies, food shortages occurred due to environmental changes, resource
depletion, or population pressures, but the nature of these shortages and how they were managed
differed significantly. That isn't to say starvation never occurred, but it seldom resulted in
wide-scale hunger. Hunter-gatherers relied on various foods, including plants, animals, fish, and
insects. This dietary diversity provided resilience against localized resource failures.
If one food source declined, they could often rely on others. Hunter gatherers were also highly
mobile. When resources in one area became scarce, they could just move to another region where food
was more abundant.
Pre-agricultural societies tended to have lower population densities, which reduced competition
for resources and made it easier for smaller groups to sustain themselves.
Deep knowledge of the natural world allowed hunter-gatherers to exploit seasonal and regional
resources efficiently, reducing the likelihood of prolonged shortages.
Despite these adaptive strategies, food shortages did occur, especially during extreme environmental
change. Hunter-gatherers employed several strategies to cope with this. They expanded their diets
to include less preferred or harder to process food, such as roots, tubers, wild grasses, or small
game. Some groups turn to food with high preparation costs like acorns, which required extensive
processing to remove toxins. During lean periods, hunter-gatherers practiced resource conservation by
limiting hunting and foraging to avoid depleting available stocks entirely. They also used limited food
storage if they had the means, such as drying and fermenting foods.
The average hunter-gatherer was probably always a few weeks or possibly even a few days from
hunger, but their nimble lifestyle allowed them to adapt accordingly.
Strangely enough, the rise of agriculture was probably a response to food insecurity, and it was
also the cause of famines. There's a great deal of debate as to why humans switch from hunting to
farming. However, one of the most popular theories is that agriculture offered humans a more
steady supply of food. Instead of having to move with the seasons and herds constantly,
the domestication of crops and animals allowed people to stay put. They could store grain
and harvest their animals as needed and eliminate the daily quest for food that dominated the
lives of hunter-gatherers. However, there was a catch. Farming was great in terms of food security
and tell the point that something disrupted the system.
If that happened, then agriculturalists were now in a worse position than the hunter-gatherers.
They couldn't drop everything to just go hunt.
Moreover, they didn't have the skills or tools to do that,
and the high populations supported by agriculture meant that wild game and plants would be exhausted quickly in the area.
The end result would be a famine.
One of the earliest known famines was a widespread,
event that affected much of the earth, known as the 4.2-kil-year event. The 4.2-kilier event,
occurring around the year 2200 BC, was a major climatic disruption marked by widespread
aridity and cooling that lasted for almost 200 years. The event significantly impacted civilizations
across the globe, particularly in the Near East, North Africa, and the Indus Valley,
where it caused severe droughts, reducing agricultural productivity, and causing societal productivity, and causing
societal upheaval. The Acadian Empire collapsed, and the Egyptian Old Kingdom went into decline,
as did the Indus Valley civilization. The famine stella is an ancient Egyptian inscription
located on Sahel Island near Aswan, dating to the Ptolemaic period, but recounting events from
the Old Kingdom. It tells the story of a seven-year famine during the reign of Pharaoh Josar,
caused by the Niles' failure to flood adequately. Famines began appearing periodically in the
historical record all over the world. Around the year 100 BC, there was a great famine reported
during the Han Dynasty in China. This, like many early famines, was caused by drought. Around the same
time, a widespread famine occurred in Sri Lanka. In 26 BC, the historian Flavius Josephus reported
a famine in the Levant. It was one of the first famines where an estimated death toll was given
of 20,000 people. Not every famine was caused by drought or environmental conditions.
There were famines in ancient Greece that were caused by war.
Farmers were also soldiers.
When they were called away too long, they couldn't harvest their crops.
Or in a worst-case scenario, they were killed and couldn't bring in their crops.
During the Roman Civil Wars, food was often used as a weapon.
Mark Antony, who controlled Egypt, kept grain from Rome to have a strategic advantage over Octavius.
In the year 365, a famine broke out in Rome when the government required people to pay their taxes in grain.
It wasn't that there wasn't enough food, it was that the food was being diverted to the government.
When the Western Roman Empire fell, there were periodic famines all over Europe which resulted in a large decline in population.
It was one of the major reasons why the population of Rome fell 90% over a 400-year period.
In the first millennium, better historical records were kept, and we then see periods of famine consistently all over the world.
They appeared in Arabia, China.
India, Byzantium, Egypt, and North Africa.
And these are just the ones that we know of.
In many cases, the famines were recorded, but the causes or the scale is not known.
We do know that sometime around the year 800 to 1,000, a massive climatic event occurred in Mesoamerica
that resulted in a massive famine and the collapse of the Maya Empire.
An estimated 1 million people died.
In 2030, the conky famine in Japan was the result of a series of volcanic.
eruptions. Over a year, about two million Japanese people died, which was estimated to be
about a third of the population of Japan. In Europe, famines were occurring about once every few
decades. There was a good chance that if you lived in Europe in the Middle Ages, you may have
lived through a famine. Most famines resulted in thousands to tens of thousands of deaths.
The 14th century saw some of the greatest famines that the world had ever seen at that point.
The great European famine, which took place from 1315 to 1317, was one of the most devastating
food crises of the medieval period, affecting much of northern and western Europe.
It was triggered by a series of unusually heavy rains and prolonged cold weather, which
began in 1315 and led to widespread crop failures.
Wet conditions made planting and harvesting difficult, and essential grains like wheat and barley
rotted in the waterlogged fields.
The resulting food shortages caused massive and.
inflation, with the price of grain skyrocketing beyond what many could afford.
An estimated 7.5 million people died.
Just two decades later, China saw a massive famine.
The Chinese famine of 1333 to 1337 was a catastrophic event during the late Yuan dynasty,
resulting from a combination of natural disasters and political instability.
Prolonged droughts, severe floods, and locust plagues devastated agricultural regions.
The Yellow River itself changed course during this period,
exacerbating the destruction and displacing millions of people.
As a result, the famine-related deaths soared to approximately 6 million,
with reports of mass starvation and social unrest.
This famine caused immense suffering and contributed to the weakening of the Mongol-Yuan dynasty,
setting the stage for the subsequent rise of the Ming Dynasty.
In the 17th century, India saw one of its greatest famines.
The Deca famine of 1630 to 1632 was a catastrophic famine that struck the Deccan plateau in India.
It was triggered by a combination of severe drought, crop failures, and poor governance.
The famine coincided with ongoing wars between the Mughals and local powers,
which disrupted trade and relief efforts, exacerbating the crisis.
Millions of people perish from starvation, and there were reports of widespread migration,
abandonment of entire villages, and even cannibalism as desperation grew.
After a series of regular famines over the course of the centuries in Europe,
the 16th and 17th century saw a reduction in the number of famines.
And the primary cause was the decline of feudalism.
The decline of feudalism in Europe, which began in the late Middle Ages and accelerated during
the Renaissance, helped reduce the frequency and severity of famines
by promoting economic and social changes that improved
food security. Feudal systems, often characterized by localized production and rigid hierarchies,
often resulted in inefficient agricultural practices and limited the movement of goods.
With the rise of centralized states, improved infrastructure and market-based economies,
trade networks expanded, enabling surplus food to be transported to famine-stricken areas more efficiently.
But that wasn't the end of famines. India still saw massive famines, the worst of which was the Great
Bengal famine of 1770. It saw 10 million dead representing an entire third of the population.
The Chalisa famine of 1783 saw 11 million dead, and the Dojibara famine of 1789 saw another
11 million dead. There were even more famines in India in the 19th century, which was a reflection
of their growing population and lack of agricultural modernization. The Chinese famine of 1906,
1907 was perhaps the most devastating famine in world history to that point.
Flooding on the Hawaii River destroyed two harvests and led to the deaths of between 20 to 25 million people.
Almost the entire population of Australia.
The 20th century saw its share of famines, but the cause of the worst famines changed.
Most famines in history were due to weather and natural disasters.
The 20th century famines were often man-made, and several cases.
were deliberately created.
The holodomor in Ukraine, which I covered in a previous episode, was orchestrated by Stalin,
as were other famines that were the result of farm collectivization.
There were famines in multiple places that were a result of both world wars.
The greatest famine in history was the Great Chinese Famine, which took place from 1958 to 1962.
An estimated 50 million people died primarily due to the policies implemented by the Chinese communist government,
during the Great Leap Forward.
Famines have never gone away totally,
but they're almost never the result of droughts or flooding anymore.
The famines that have taken place in the 21st century
have almost all occurred in Africa and almost always due to civil wars.
For all practical purposes,
we have solved the problem of food in the modern world.
Today, obesity is a bigger problem than starvation,
which is a testament to just how far we've come.
The reason I wanted to do this episode is that many of the major famines that I mentioned briefly
are planned for future episodes to discuss in depth.
And I also thought it would be helpful to provide a high-level overview before diving in to these various topics.
The Bible calls famine one of the four-horsmen of the apocalypse, and for good reason,
the lack of food and starvation has been responsible for the deaths of more people than probably anything else in human history.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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