'Ash fell from the skies to the earth': The eruption of the Vesuvius in 1631 AD and the Balkan lands
„Паде прах са небеса на земљу“ - ерупција Везува 1631. године и балканске земље
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After the most notorious eruption of the Vesuvius in 79 AD, the one that occurred on 16th December 1631 resulted in thousands of human victims and large-scale damage. According to modern volcanology studies, the amount of dust and ash emitted on this occasion was only three times smaller that in the famous eruption of Krakatau in 1883. Numerous historical sources registered the fall of volcanic ash, which is proved to be the true meaning of three Serbian marginal notes presented in this article. Anonymous monks in the monasteries of St. George near Pljevlja, Pološko and another one which still cannot be precisely identified, reported the fallout of ash on Wednesday, December 7, according to the Julian, i.e. 17 according to the Gregorian calendar. Considering the velocity of ash clouds, it is assumed that in both cases it could have been the first thing they saw at dawn, on the day after the eruption (cf. the map in this paper). Along with the "black powder", the same kind of historical... sources - Serbian marginal notes, and The Chronicle of Fra Nikola Lašvanin - also provide the data on "red/bloody snow" on three separate occasions (1638, 1640 and 1690). These phenomena can be scientifically explained as deposits of desert dust from northern Africa brought by south-southwest air currents over the Balkan region. The last issue discussed in this paper is the possible connection between this particular volcanic eruption and short-term climate changes it may have caused in the Balkans.
U radu se analiziraju tekstovi tri zapisa o "prahu crnom kao pepeo" koji je pao i prekrio sneg. Beleške anonimnih monaha tačno su datirane i mogu se sa sigurnošću dovesti u vezu sa velikom erupcijom vulkana Vezuva u blizini Napulja koja se dogodila 16. decembra 1631. godine. Na osnovu geografskog položaja pravoslavnih manastira gde su zapisi nastali moguće je približno odrediti vreme kada je pepeo dospeo na površinu zemlje. U radu se razmatra i mogućnost uzročno-posledičnih veza između vulkanskih erupcija i klimatskih promena.
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Balcanica, 2004, 35, 223-238Institution/Community
Балканолошки институт САНУ / Institute for Balkan Studies SASATY - JOUR AU - Мргић, Јелена PY - 2004 UR - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/4200 AB - After the most notorious eruption of the Vesuvius in 79 AD, the one that occurred on 16th December 1631 resulted in thousands of human victims and large-scale damage. According to modern volcanology studies, the amount of dust and ash emitted on this occasion was only three times smaller that in the famous eruption of Krakatau in 1883. Numerous historical sources registered the fall of volcanic ash, which is proved to be the true meaning of three Serbian marginal notes presented in this article. Anonymous monks in the monasteries of St. George near Pljevlja, Pološko and another one which still cannot be precisely identified, reported the fallout of ash on Wednesday, December 7, according to the Julian, i.e. 17 according to the Gregorian calendar. Considering the velocity of ash clouds, it is assumed that in both cases it could have been the first thing they saw at dawn, on the day after the eruption (cf. the map in this paper). Along with the "black powder", the same kind of historical sources - Serbian marginal notes, and The Chronicle of Fra Nikola Lašvanin - also provide the data on "red/bloody snow" on three separate occasions (1638, 1640 and 1690). These phenomena can be scientifically explained as deposits of desert dust from northern Africa brought by south-southwest air currents over the Balkan region. The last issue discussed in this paper is the possible connection between this particular volcanic eruption and short-term climate changes it may have caused in the Balkans. AB - U radu se analiziraju tekstovi tri zapisa o "prahu crnom kao pepeo" koji je pao i prekrio sneg. Beleške anonimnih monaha tačno su datirane i mogu se sa sigurnošću dovesti u vezu sa velikom erupcijom vulkana Vezuva u blizini Napulja koja se dogodila 16. decembra 1631. godine. Na osnovu geografskog položaja pravoslavnih manastira gde su zapisi nastali moguće je približno odrediti vreme kada je pepeo dospeo na površinu zemlje. U radu se razmatra i mogućnost uzročno-posledičnih veza između vulkanskih erupcija i klimatskih promena. T2 - Balcanica T1 - 'Ash fell from the skies to the earth': The eruption of the Vesuvius in 1631 AD and the Balkan lands T1 - „Паде прах са небеса на земљу“ - ерупција Везува 1631. године и балканске земље SP - 223 EP - 238 IS - 35 DO - 10.2298/BALC0535223M UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_4200 ER -
@article{ author = "Мргић, Јелена", year = "2004", abstract = "After the most notorious eruption of the Vesuvius in 79 AD, the one that occurred on 16th December 1631 resulted in thousands of human victims and large-scale damage. According to modern volcanology studies, the amount of dust and ash emitted on this occasion was only three times smaller that in the famous eruption of Krakatau in 1883. Numerous historical sources registered the fall of volcanic ash, which is proved to be the true meaning of three Serbian marginal notes presented in this article. Anonymous monks in the monasteries of St. George near Pljevlja, Pološko and another one which still cannot be precisely identified, reported the fallout of ash on Wednesday, December 7, according to the Julian, i.e. 17 according to the Gregorian calendar. Considering the velocity of ash clouds, it is assumed that in both cases it could have been the first thing they saw at dawn, on the day after the eruption (cf. the map in this paper). Along with the "black powder", the same kind of historical sources - Serbian marginal notes, and The Chronicle of Fra Nikola Lašvanin - also provide the data on "red/bloody snow" on three separate occasions (1638, 1640 and 1690). These phenomena can be scientifically explained as deposits of desert dust from northern Africa brought by south-southwest air currents over the Balkan region. The last issue discussed in this paper is the possible connection between this particular volcanic eruption and short-term climate changes it may have caused in the Balkans., U radu se analiziraju tekstovi tri zapisa o "prahu crnom kao pepeo" koji je pao i prekrio sneg. Beleške anonimnih monaha tačno su datirane i mogu se sa sigurnošću dovesti u vezu sa velikom erupcijom vulkana Vezuva u blizini Napulja koja se dogodila 16. decembra 1631. godine. Na osnovu geografskog položaja pravoslavnih manastira gde su zapisi nastali moguće je približno odrediti vreme kada je pepeo dospeo na površinu zemlje. U radu se razmatra i mogućnost uzročno-posledičnih veza između vulkanskih erupcija i klimatskih promena.", journal = "Balcanica", title = "'Ash fell from the skies to the earth': The eruption of the Vesuvius in 1631 AD and the Balkan lands, „Паде прах са небеса на земљу“ - ерупција Везува 1631. године и балканске земље", pages = "223-238", number = "35", doi = "10.2298/BALC0535223M", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_4200" }
Мргић, Ј.. (2004). 'Ash fell from the skies to the earth': The eruption of the Vesuvius in 1631 AD and the Balkan lands. in Balcanica(35), 223-238. https://doi.org/10.2298/BALC0535223M https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_4200
Мргић Ј. 'Ash fell from the skies to the earth': The eruption of the Vesuvius in 1631 AD and the Balkan lands. in Balcanica. 2004;(35):223-238. doi:10.2298/BALC0535223M https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_4200 .
Мргић, Јелена, "'Ash fell from the skies to the earth': The eruption of the Vesuvius in 1631 AD and the Balkan lands" in Balcanica, no. 35 (2004):223-238, https://doi.org/10.2298/BALC0535223M ., https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_4200 .