Page 211 - Berkshire Encyclopedia Of World History Vol Two
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            Scientists came quickly to understand that control of  famine in the early fourteenth century may explain the
            insect populations is essential if one hopes to minimize  high mortality of the Black Death. Plague, if the cause of
            crop damage from an insect-borne pathogen. It was no  the Black Death, should not have killed between a third
            longer enough for the plant pathologist to understand  and half of Europe’s people between 1347 and 1351, for
            diseases. He now had to understand the feeding and  plague is a disease of rodents and other small mammals.
            mating habits of insects and their distribution in areas of  Yet ergotism and famine may have left Europe’s peasants
            disease. The need to combat insects accelerated the  and urban poor too weak to ward off plague.The result
            study and development of insecticides as a branch of  was the worst pandemic of the Middle Ages.
            applied chemistry in the twentieth century.The study of
            insect-borne viruses and the development and use of  Diseases of the Staple Crops
            insecticides would later be crucial in fighting corn dis-  Indigenous to the Americas
            eases in the United States.                         Late Blight of Potato
                                                                The fungus that causes late blight of potato is at the cen-
            Rye Ergotism                                        ter of a tragedy, the Irish Potato Famine.The tragedy has
            The importance of wheat and rice to the sustenance of  its roots not in Europe but in the Andes Mountains,
            Europeans and Asians has deflected attention from rye  where the natives of Peru domesticated the potato. The
            and its diseases. The Germanic tribes that settled the  Spanish conquered Peru in the sixteenth century. In
            lands that are today France and Germany began growing  search of gold, they found a more valuable commodity,
            rye in the second century CE.Wheat always commanded  the potato. From Peru the potato reached Spain by ship
            a higher price than rye, making rye bread the staple of the  around 1570, then spread west through continental
            poor until the even cheaper potato spread through   Europe and north across the English Channel, reaching
            Europe between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries.  Ireland before 1800. On the continent, the potato vied
              The diseases of rye thus afflicted the poor rather than  with rye bread as the staple of the poor. In Ireland poli-
            the rich. Particularly serious was ergotism, a fungal dis-  tics and economic exploitation made it the only staple.
            ease that fills rye grains with a toxin that in sufficient  For many years the Irish sought independence from
            quantities causes convulsions and death in humans.  England, a goal England’s Lord Protector Oliver Crom-
            Unlike most plant diseases, ergot of rye threatens humans  well crushed. In the 1650s his army ravaged Ireland and
            by poisoning them rather than by causing famine. The  Cromwell divided the land among his supporters.These
            agony of death from ergot toxicity led medieval Euro-  men charged rents so high that the Irish peasant could set
            peans to attribute the disease to God’s wrath, hence the  aside only a small plot of land for his family.The rest of
            name “Holy Fire.” Medieval chronicles cite the first out-  the land went to raise the grain and livestock peasants
            break of Holy Fire in the eighth century. In 857 CE, thou-  needed to pay rent.
            sands died in the Rhine Valley, with smaller outbreaks  By 1800 the Irish, squeezed by their lack of land and
            throughout France and Germany.                      high rent, had no choice but to embrace the potato for
              One may recall that fungi spread in wet environments.  sustenance because it yielded more food per unit of land
            Evidence from dendrology and medieval chronicles sug-  than any grain. Reliance on a single crop is always risky,
            gests that after 1000 CE, Europe’s climate turned wet and  as Columella had emphasized in the first century. The
            cool, hastening the spread and severity of ergotism in  potato posed risks far greater than the Irish could have
            northern and western Europe. An outbreak in 1039 was  imagined.The Spanish had brought little more than a few
            the first in a series of virulent outbreaks between the  handfuls of potatoes with them. These potatoes were of
            eleventh and eighteenth centuries. Ergotism along with  the same stock and thus genetically uniform. Because the
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