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en:List of famines 12 August 2010 at 12:19 UTC |
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飢饉の一覧(ききんのいちらん)は、主な飢饉を時代順に列挙する。
紀元前5世紀
- 440 BC famine in Ancient Rome.
紀元前2世紀
- Between 108 BC and 1911 AD there were no fewer than 1,828 major famines in China, or one nearly every year in one or another province; however, the famines varied greatly in severity.[1][2]
5世紀
- Famine in Western Europe associated with the Fall of Rome and its sack by Alaric I. Between 400 and 800 AD, the population of the city of Rome fell by over 90%, mainly because of famine and plague.[3]
7世紀
- 639 AD– Famine in Arabia during the Caliphate of Umar ibn al-Khattab
- 650 Famine throughout India
8世紀
9世紀
- 800–1000 AD, severe drought killed millions of Maya people with famine and thirst and initiated a cascade of internal collapses that destroyed their civilization[5]
- 809 famine in Frankish Empire[6]
- 875–884 peasant rebellion in China inspired by famine; Huang Chao captured capital
10世紀
- 927 famine in Byzantine Empire
- 963–964 famine in Ireland
- 968 famine in Egypt; 500,000 dead
11世紀
- 1005 Famine in England.[7] There were 95 famines in Britain during the Middle Ages.[8][9]
- 1016 Famine throughout Europe[10]
- 1022, 1033, 1052 Great famines in India, in which entire provinces were depopulated
- 1025 famine in Egypt
- 1030–1032 famine in France
- 1064–1072 Seven years' famine in Egypt
- 1051 famine forced the Toltecs to migrate from a stricken region in what is now central Mexico[11]
- 1066 famine in England
- 1097 famine in Palestine; 500,000 dead
- 1097 famine and plague in France; 100,000 dead
12世紀
- 1199–1202 famine in Egypt
13世紀
- 1230 famine in Novgorod
- 1231–1232 famine in Japan
- 1235 famine in England. 20,000 die in London, alone
- 1255 famine in Portugal[12]
- 1258 famine in Germany and Italy
- 1275–1299 collapse of Anasazi civilization, widespread famine occurred[13]
- 1294 famine in England
14世紀
- 1315–1317 Great Famine in Europe[14]
- 1333 famine in Portugal
- 1333–1334 famine in Spain
- 1333–1337 famine in China[15]
- 1344–1345 Great famine in India
- 1387 after Timur the Lame left Asia Minor, severe famine ensued
- 1390 Famine in England
- 1396–1407 The Durga Devi famine in India, lasting twelve years[16]
15世紀
- 1403–1404 famine in Egypt
- 1441 famine in Mayapan, Mexico[17]
- 1445 famine in Korea
- 1450–1454 famine in Aztec Empire
- 1460–1461 Kanshō famine in Japan
- 1481–1483 famine in France
16世紀
- 1504 famine in Spain[18]
- 1518 famine in Venice
- 1528 famine in Languedoc, France[19]
- 1535 famine in Ethiopia
- 1540 famine in Spain
- 1555 famine in England
- 1567–1570 famine in Harar in Ethiopia, combined with plague. Emir of Harar, died.
- 1574–1576 famine in Istanbul and Anatolia
- 1586 famine in England which gave rise to the Poor Law system
- 1590s famines in Europe
17世紀
- 1599–1600 famine in Spain
- 1601–1603 one of the worst famines in all of Russian history; famine killed as many as 100,000 in Moscow and up to one-third of Tsar Godunov's subjects; see Russian famine of 1601–1603.[20][21] Same famine killed about half Estonian population.
- 1611 famine in Anatolia
- 1618–1648 famines in Europe caused by Thirty Years' War
- 1619 famine in Japan. During the Tokugawa period, there were 154 famines, of which 21 were widespread and serious.[22]
- 1623–1624 famine in England
- 1630–1631 Deccan famine in India kills 2,000,000 (Note: There was a corresponding famine in northwestern China, eventually causing the Ming dynasty to collapse in 1644)
- 1636 famine in Spain
- 1648–1660 Poland lost an estimated 1/3 of its population due to the wars, famine, and plague
- 1649 famine in northern England
- 1650–1652 famine in the east of France
- 1651–1653 famine throughout much of Ireland during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland[23]
- 1661 famine in India, when not a drop of rain fell for two years[24]
- 1661–1662 famine in Morocco
- 1661–1662 famine in France
- 1669 famine in Bengal
- 1670s and 1680s plague and famines in Spain
- 1680 famine in Sardinia[25]
- 1680 famine in Japan
- 1680s famine in Sahel
- 1690s famine throughoutScotland which killed 15% of the population
- 1693–1694 famine in France which killed 2 million people[26][27]
- 1695–1697 Great Famine of Estonia killed about a fifth of Estonian population (70 000–75 000 people). Famine also hit Sweden (80 000–100 000 dead)
- 1696–1697 famine in Finland wiped out almost a third of the population[28]
18世紀
- 1702–1704 famine in Deccan, India, killed 2 million people
- 1706–1707 famine in France
- 1708–1711 famine in East Prussia killed 250,000 people or 41% of its population[29]
- 1709–1710 famine in France[30]
- 1722 famine in Arabia[31]
- 1727–1728 famine in England[32]
- 1732 famine in Japan
- 1738–1739 famine in France
- 1738–1756 famine in West Africa, half the population of Timbuktu died of starvation[33]
- 1740-1741 famine in Ireland
- 1741 famine in Norway
- 1750 famine in Spain
- 1750–1756 famine in the Senegambia region [34]
- 1764 famine in Naples[35]
- 1769–1773 Bengal famine of 1770,[36] 15 million dead (one third of population)
- 1770–1771 famine in Czech lands killed hundreds of thousands people
- 1771–1772 famine in Saxony and southern Germany
- 1773 famine in Sweden
- 1779 famine in Rabat, Morocco[37]
- 1780s famine in Scotland
- 1780s Great Tenmei Famine in Japan
- 1783 famine in Iceland caused by Laki (volcano) eruption killed one-fifth of Iceland's population[38]
- 1783–84 Chalisa famine in South Asia
- 1784 widespread famine throughout Egypt[39]
- 1784–1785 famine in Tunisia killed up to one-fifth of all Tunisians
- 1788 famine in France. The two years previous to the French Revolution saw bad harvests and harsh winters, possibly because of a strong El Niño cycle[40] or caused by the 1783 Laki eruption in Iceland.[41][42]
- 1789 Famine in Ethiopia afflicted "all the provinces"
- 1789–92 Doji bara famine or Skull famine in India
19世紀
- 1800–1801 famine in Ireland
- Four famines – in 1810, 1811, 1846, and 1849 – in China claimed nearly 45 million lives.[43]
- 1811–1812 famine devastated Madrid, taking nearly 20,000 lives
- 1815 eruption of Tambora, Indonesia. Tens of thousands died of subsequent famine
- 1816–1817 famine in Europe (Year Without a Summer)
- 1830 famine killed almost half the population of Cape Verde
- 1830s Tenpo famine (Japan)
- 1835 famine in Egypt killed 200,000[要出典]
- 1844–1846 famine in Belgium
- 1845–1857 Highland Potato Famine in Scotland
- 1845–1849 Great Irish Famine killed more than 1 million people and over 1.5 - 2 million emigrated[44]
- 1846 famine led to the peasant revolt known as “Maria da Fonte” in the north of Portugal
- 1850–1873 as a result of Taiping Rebellion, drought, and famine, the population of China drop by over 60 million people[45]
- 1866 Orissa famine of 1866 in India; one million perished
- 1866–1868 Famine in Finland. About 15% of the entire population died
- 1869 Rajputana famine of 1869 in India; one million and a half perished
- 1870–1871 famine in Persia is believed to have caused the death of 2 million persons[46]
- 1873–1874 famine in Anatolia
- 1879 Famine in Ireland
- All mortality avoided in Bihar famine of 1873–74 in India.
- 1876–1879 ENSO Famine in India, China, Brazil, Northern Africa (and other countries). Famine in northern China killed 13 million people. 5.25 million died in the Great Famine of 1876–78 in India.
- 1878-1880 famine in St. Lawrence Island, Alaska[47]
- 1888 famine in Sudan
- 1888–1892 Ethiopian Great famine. About one-third of the population died.[48][49] Conditions worsen with cholera outbreaks (1889-92), a typhus epidemic, and a major smallpox epidemic (1889–90).
- 1891–1892 famine in Russia caused 375,000 to 500,000 deaths[50][51]
- 1896–1897 ENSO famine in northern China leading in part to the Boxer Rebellion
- 1896–1902 ENSO famine in India[52]
20世紀
- 1906 famine in Russia
- 1907,1911 famines in east-central China
- 1914–1918 Mount Lebanon famine during World War I which killed about a third of the population
- 1914–1918 famine in Belgium
- 1915–1916 Armenian Genocide. Armenian deportees starved to death
- 1916–1917 famine caused by the British blockade of Germany in WWI
- 1916–1917 winter famine in Russia
- 1917–1919 famine in Persia. As much as 1/4 of the population living in the north of Iran died in the famine[53]
- 1917–1921 a series of famines in Turkestan at the time of the Bolshevik revolution killed about a sixth of the population[54]
- 1921 famine in Russia killed 5 million[55]
- 1921–1922 Famine in Tatarstan
- 1921–1922 famine in Volga German colonies in Russia. One-third of the entire population perished[56]
- 1928–1929 famine in northern China. The drought resulted in 3 million deaths
- 1928–1929 famine in Ruanda-Burundi, causing large migrations to the Congo
- 1932–1933 Soviet famine in Ukraine (Holodomor), some parts of Russia[57] and North Caucasus area.[58] 2.6 to 10 million people may have died[59]
- 1932–1933 famine in Kazakhstan killed 1.2-1.5 million[60]
- 1936 famine in China, with an estimated 5 million fatalities[61]
- 1940–1943 famine in Warsaw Ghetto
- 1941–44 Leningrad famine caused by a 900-day blockade by German troops. About one million Leningrad residents starved, froze, or were bombed to death in the winter of 1941–42, when supply routes to the city were cut off and temperatures dropped to −40 degrees.[62]
- 1941–1944 famine in Greece caused by the Axis occupation.[63][64] An estimated 300,000 people perished
- 1942–1943 famine killed one million in China
- 1943 famine in Bengal(India)
- 1943 famine in Ruanda-Urundi, causing migrations to the Congo
- 1944 famine in the Netherlands during World War II, more than 20,000 deaths
- 1946 famine in Germany
- 1945 famine in Vietnam
- 1946–1947 famine in Soviet Union killed 1-1.5 million[65][66]
- 1958 Famine in Tigray, Ethiopia, claimed 100,000 lives
- 1959–1961 Great Leap Forward / The Great Chinese Famine (China). The Chinese journalist Yang Jisheng has estimated that 36 million died.
- 1965–1967 drought in India responsible for 1.5 million deaths[67]
- 1967–1970 Biafran famine caused by Nigerian blockade
- 1968–1972 Sahel drought created a famine that killed a million people[68]
- 1973 famine in Ethiopia; failure of the government to handle this crisis led to fall of Haile Selassie and to Derg rule
- 1974 famine in Bangladesh
- 1975–1979 Khmer Rouge. An estimated 2 million Cambodians lost their lives to murder, forced labor and famine
- 1980 famine in Karamoja, Uganda
- 1984 famine in Ethiopia
- 1991–1993 Somalian famine
- 1996 North Korean famine [4] [5]. Scholars estimate 600,000 died of starvation (other estimates range from 200,000 to 3.5 million).[69]
- 1998 famine in Sudan caused by war and drought
- 1998–2000 famine in Ethiopia. The situation worsened by Eritrean-Ethiopian War
- 1998–2004 Second Congo War. 3.8 million people died, mostly from starvation and disease
- 2000–2009 Zimbabwe's food crisis caused by Mugabe's land reform policies[70]
21世紀
- 2003– famine in Sudan/Darfur (Darfur conflict)
- 2005 Malawi food crisis
- 2005–06 Niger food crisis
- 2006 Horn of Africa food crisis
- 2008– Myanmar food crisis. The Cyclone Nargis devastated Burma's major rice-producing region.[71]
- 2008– North Korean famine[72][73]
- 2008– Horn of Africa food crisis[74][75]
- 2008– Afghanistan food crisis[76]
- 2008– Bangladesh food crisis[77]
- 2008– East Africa food crisis[78]
- 2008– Tajikistan food crisis[79]
- 2009– Kenya food crisis[80] 10 million Kenyans face starvation.[81]
関連項目
- 飢饉
- 人口爆発
- 飢餓
- 中世の人口統計 (en)
- 平均余命
- 世界人口
- 食の安全保障
- 災害
- 自然災害の一覧 (犠牲者順)
- en:Climate changes of 535–536
- en:Collapse (book)
- en:Late Victorian Holocausts (book on the great ENSO famines of 1876–80, 1896–1900)
- en:Depopulation
- en:List of disasters
- en:List of famines in China
- Agriculture and population limits
- en:2007–2008 world food price crisis
脚注
- ^ China: Land of Famine
- ^ "Heaven, Observe!" – TIME
- ^ A Brief History of Population
- ^ Islamic and Christian Spain in the Early Middle Ages
- ^ The Great Maya Droughts: Water, Life, and Death
- ^ The Ninth Century
- ^ 1005: The People's Chronology
- ^ Famines through history.
- ^ Poor studies will always be with us
- ^ Famine – LoveToKnow 1911
- ^ The Facts of Malnutrition and Famine
- ^ Portugal > History and Events
- ^ Collapse: Chaco Canyon
- ^ The Great Famine and the Black Death
- ^ Projects and Events: 14th Century
- ^ Bidar District Important Historical Events
- ^ Welcome to The Human Past
- ^ Land and Society in Golden Age Castile
- ^ The Dimension of Famine
- ^ Boris Feodorovich Godunov
- ^ Russia before Peter the Great
- ^ A Chronology of Japanese History
- ^ BBC – Northern Ireland – A Short History
- ^ The 17th Century
- ^ Italian States in the Seventeenth Century
- ^ Appleby, Andrew B. (1980). “Epidemics and Famine in the Little Ice Age”. Journal of Interdisciplinary History (The MIT Press) 10 (4): 643–663. doi:10.2307/203063 .
- ^ Ó Gráda, Cormac; Chevet, Jean-Michel (2002). “Famine And Market In Ancient Régime France”. The Journal of Economic History 62: 706–733. doi:10.1017/S0022050702001055.
- ^ Finland timeline
- ^ The Dimension of Famine.
- ^ The Little Ice Age in Europe
- ^ Climatic fluctuation and natural disasters in Arabia between mid-17th and early 20th Centuries
- ^ Epidemics and Famine in the Little Ice Age
- ^ Len Milich: Anthropogenic Desertification vs ‘Natural’ Climate Trends
- ^ [1]
- ^ Naples and Sicily -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
- ^ FAMINE ()
- ^ The locust plague
- ^ Haze Famine (Icelandic history)
- ^ ScienceDaily: Icelandic Volcano Caused Historic Famine In Egypt, Study Shows
- ^ Grove, Richard H. (1998). “Global Impact of the 1789–93 El Niño”. Nature 393 (6683): 318–319. doi:10.1038/30636.
- ^ Wood, C. A. (1992). “The climatic effects of the 1783 Laki eruption”. In Harrington, C. R. (ed.). The Year Without a Summer?. Ottawa: Canadian Museum of Nature. pp. 58–77
- ^ Neumann, J. (1977). “Great Historical Events that were Significantly Affected by the Weather: 2, The Year Leading to the Revolution of 1789 in France”. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 58 (2): 163–168. doi:10.1175/1520-0477(1977)058<0163:GHETWS>2.0.CO;2.
- ^ Fearfull Famines of the Past
- ^ The Great Famine in Ireland, 1845–1849
- ^ Ch'ing China: The Taiping Rebellion
- ^ The Great Persian Famine of 1870-1871
- ^ The St. Lawrence Island Famine and Epidemic, 1878–80, Arctic Anthropology
- ^ Famine Hunger stalks Ethiopia once again – and aid groups fear the worst
- ^ El Niño and Drought Early Warning in Ethiopia
- ^ The History of International Humanitarian Assistance
- ^ Spiridovich, Alexander. Revolutionary movement in Russian. Ed. 2. (ロシア語)
- ^ Late Victorian Holocausts
- ^ Global Connections . Timeline
- ^ Famine perspectives from past and present
- ^ World's worst natural disasters since 1900
- ^ The German Colonies on the Volga River – Famine Years
- ^ The NDSU Libraries: Germans From Russia
- ^ Famine of 1932, or Ukrainian genocide (Soviet history)
- ^ Legacy of famine divides Ukraine
- ^ The Kazakh Catastrophe and Stalin’s Order of Priorities, 1929–1933: Evidence from the Soviet Secret Archives
- ^ Natural Disasters and Hazards – Historical Events Timeline
- ^ 900-Day Siege of Leningrad
- ^ Famine and Death in Occupied Greece, 1941-1944
- ^ Surviving Hitler and Mussolini: daily life in occupied Europe, by Robert Gildea, Anette Warring, Olivier Wieviorka, Berg Publishers 2007
- ^ The 1947 Soviet famine and the entitlement approach to famines, Cambridge Journal of Economics
- ^ Nicholas Ganson, The Soviet Famine of 1946-47 in Global and Historical Perspective[2]. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. (ISBN 0-230-61333-0)
- ^ The world's worst natural disastersCBC News, 27th February 2010
- ^ Famine Casts Its Grim Global Shadow, TIME
- ^ Bruce Cumings: We look at it and see ourselves
- ^ Famine plagues Zimbabwe
- ^ Food crisis looms in Myanmar, International Herald Tribune
- ^ North Korea at risk of famine, says U.N., CNN.com
- ^ The Next Great North Korean Famine, TIME
- ^ Ethiopia facing new famine with 4.5 million children in danger of starvation , Telegraph
- ^ Gettleman, Jeffrey (2008年5月17日). “Famine Looms as Wars Rend Horn of Africa”. New York Times 2010年5月8日閲覧。.
- ^ Food crisis leaves Afghans desperate, msnbc.com
- ^ Food Crisis Looms in Bangladesh, International Business Times
- ^ In-depth | Food Crisis: Status and Impacts, IRIN
- ^ Tajikistan: Almost One-Third of the Population Is in Danger of Going Hungry This Winter, EurasiaNet
- ^ National Food Emergency Grips Kenya. 20 Jan 2009.
- ^ Starvation and Strife Menace Torn Kenya. The New York Times. February 28, 2009.
外部リンク
- Livy 4.13
- The looming food crisis
- Millions face famine as crop disease rages
- Fuelling a Food Crisis: The impact of peak oil on food security
- Global food crisis looms as climate change and population growth strip fertile land
- Global food crisis looms as climate change and fuel shortages bite
- Forget oil, the new global crisis is food
- Famine in China
- Famines in Ukraine
- One hundred years of famine
- Another Famine
- A Brief History of Population
- Worlds Worst Natural Disasters
- Great Famine (1695–1697)
- Legacy of famine divides Ukraine
- The dimension of famine
- The famine in China |1899-1909
- The worst Natural Disasters ever
- Outgrowing the Earth
- Oil and Food: A Rising Security Challenge
- Drought and Desertification
- Water Shortages May Lead to Food Shortages
- The facts on malnutrition & famine
- Water and Climate Events of the 20th Century
- Death Toll Disasters-War-Accidents
- World's worst natural disasters since 1900
- Time of Troubles
- Famine – LoveToKnow 1911
- Famine perspectives from past and present
- Famine looms in Zimbabwe, aid agency warns
- この一覧は未完成です。加筆、訂正して下さる協力者を求めています。