Table of contents : Contents......Page 5 Introduction......Page 7 Abstract......Page 8 Antagonisms......Page 10 Entanglements......Page 12 Famine as Boundary Object......Page 14 Famines During the Little Ice Age (1300–1800)......Page 15 References......Page 19 Interdisciplinary Approaches......Page 22 Abstract......Page 23 References......Page 41 Introduction......Page 46 Indirect Sources of Subsistence Crises......Page 48 Tree-Ring Evidence on Climate and Harvest Fluctuations......Page 50 Proxies of Population and Food Supply......Page 52 Climate, Frost and Crop Failure......Page 54 The Little Ice Age and Frequency of Crop Failures......Page 55 Man-Made Proxies of Food Crises......Page 57 Identifying and Quantifying Famines from Proxy Data?......Page 61 Summary......Page 63 Appendix......Page 64 Printed Sources and Literature......Page 66 Socionatural Entanglements......Page 70 Introduction......Page 71 Subsistence Crises During the Little Ice Age: Definitions, Approaches and Factors......Page 72 The Crisis at the Beginning of the 1480s......Page 75 The Crisis at the End of the 1480s and at the Beginning of the 1490s......Page 82 Conclusion......Page 88 Printed Sources......Page 89 Literature......Page 90 Abstract......Page 93 Introduction......Page 94 Documentary Data......Page 95 The Famine of the 1280s......Page 98 The Famine of the Second Decade of the Fourteenth Century......Page 101 The Famine of the 1430s......Page 104 Conclusions......Page 109 References......Page 110 Abstract......Page 117 The SRSR Grain System Before the ‘Little Ice Age’......Page 120 The ‘Little Ice Age’ and the Collapse of the SRSR System......Page 123 References......Page 129 Coping......Page 132 Introduction......Page 133 Competing Concepts......Page 135 Multifactorial Models......Page 136 Pictorial Sources......Page 137 Serial Material......Page 139 Integrative Approaches......Page 140 Literature......Page 141 Abstract......Page 148 Italian Famines, 1400–1700: An Overview......Page 149 Advanced (Pre-modern) Economies Facing Famine: The Case of the 1590s......Page 154 The Republic of Genoa......Page 155 Duchy of Ferrara......Page 158 Conclusion: Agrarian Innovation and the (Quasi-)End of Famine......Page 163 References......Page 165 Introduction......Page 169 Berkel and Its Poor Relief System......Page 173 The Crisis of the Late 1590s......Page 177 The Crisis of the Late 1690s......Page 181 References......Page 188 Abstract......Page 192 Poverty, Hunger, Work and the Will to School the Children......Page 195 The Pastors’ View of the Famine as a Divine Punishment......Page 196 Perceptions of the Famine and Coping Strategies Within the Ruling Elite of the City-State......Page 198 Educationalizing Hunger—Symbolic Actions or Fundamental Change?......Page 201 Literature......Page 203 Perceiving and Remembering......Page 206 Abstract......Page 207 Were the Franks Threatened by Natural Hazards?......Page 209 Nature and Culture—A Brief Introduction......Page 211 The Famine of 779 in Carolingian Sources......Page 212 Resilience or Vulnerability?......Page 218 Strategic Gaps in the Record?......Page 220 Primary Sources......Page 222 Secondary Works......Page 223 Abstract......Page 227 The Performative Medium......Page 230 The Visual Medium......Page 236 The Medial Transposition of the Parade......Page 242 Communicating Closure......Page 245 References......Page 246 Manuscripts......Page 248 Pictures......Page 249 Abstract......Page 251 Hunger in Ancient Egypt......Page 252 Hunger During the Little Ice Age......Page 254 Turning Point—French Revolution......Page 255 Tambora and the “Year Without Summer”......Page 258 Irish Famine......Page 260 Sahel—A Man-Made Hunger Catastrophe?......Page 262 The Material Culture of Hunger......Page 263 References......Page 264