NORCLI Nordic Climate History

Painting: Swedish troops crossing the frozen Belt in 1658. Painting: Johann Philipp Lemke (1631–1711). Nationalmusem, Stockholm, Sweden.

Swedish troops crossing the frozen Belt in 1658. Painting: Johann Philipp Lemke (1631–1711). Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, Sweden.

Duration
01.08.2024–30.07.2026

What happened the last time Nordic societies encountered rapid climate change? How did natural and social environments interact during the Little Ice Age (1300-1900), the Late Antique climate anomaly (500-700) and in response to major volcanic events (i.e. the 530s, 1250s, 1690s)??What can be learned from the ways people adapted to challenges that are in many ways similar to the ones we face today?

Contact

What happened the last time Nordic societies encountered rapid climate change? How did natural and social environments interact during the Little Ice Age (1300-1900), the Late Antique climate anomaly (500-700) and in response to major volcanic events (i.e. the 530s, 1250s, 1690s)??

What can be learned from the ways people adapted to these challenges in the past that are in many ways similar to the ones we face today?

About the project

The Nordic Climate History (NORCLI) research group studies past climate shifts to help us situate current challenges. It uses?a novel?socionatural?approach that integrates climatology, history, and museology. It does so because to make climate science relevant, its models need to be related to human experience. The past offers a rich repertoire of such ‘lived interactions’.?

In 2024/2025 the project will team up with a research group on the?Nordic Little Ice Age?hosted by the?Center for Advanced Studies, Oslo.?You can read some press articles about our research following the links below:?

Key events

Interdisciplinarity

Climate history is an emerging research field. It is characterized by “big interdisciplinarity” connecting scientists, historians, and societal stakeholders.

The Thematic research group "Nordic Climate history" (NORCLI) is hosted jointly by the faculty of mathematics and natural sciences (MATNAT) and the faculty of humanities (HF). It connects recent top-level research groups across these fields at UiO (CLIMCULT,?VIKINGS) and put them in conversation with key researchers across Europe that will take residence in Oslo in 2024/25 (CAS groups NORLIA + CLIMCRIS) as well as regional stakeholders (KLIMAHUSET).

NORLIA will proceed in three steps: (1)?reconnecting?available data from both the?archives of nature?(tree-rings, climate model data) and the?archives of society?(historical records, material culture) with a focus on extreme events initiated by abrupt climate change in the last two millennia; (2)?integrating?interactions ‘from agriculture to culture’ bringing scientists and historians together at eye-level; and (3)?narrating?results to a wider museum and societal audience via an exhibition and participatory events at Klimahuset Oslo in spring 2025.

Objectives

The objectives of the project are threefold. It will:

  • establish?‘climate history’ at UiO and position the university at the centre of this emerging field
  • fill?current knowledge gaps by integrating climate change and "lived" human experience
  • broaden?our societal repertoire for climate adaptation measures.

Book: Nordic Climate Histories

Nordic Climate Histories - book coverThe project published a comprehensive book gathering research from across the Nordics in a single open access volume. The book is available from the White Hourse Press online as a PDF (and in print).?

Down the centuries, the people of the Nordic countries have confronted challenges from climatic variability and change and sought ways to survive and adapt. In a time of accelerating global warming, these climate histories take on new contemporary significance. Drawing on tools from the natural and historical sciences, the innovative scholarship in this volume addresses questions such as: How did Nordic societies cope with past climatic hazards? What was the historical significance of the ‘Little Ice Age’ or the ‘Medieval Climate Anomaly’ for Nordic countries? And how do we study, narrate and learn from these past experiences?

Reference to the book:?

Collet, D., Gundersen, I. M., Huhtamaa, H., Ljungqvist, F, C., Ogilvie, A., and S. White (eds). 2025. Nordic Climate Histories, Impacts, Pathways, Narratives. The White Horse Press. ISBN 978-1-912186-98-3 (PB) ?30, 360pp | eISBN 978-1-912186-99-0 (Open Access eBook)

Cooperation

Financing

NORCLI is financed by?UiO:Energy and Environment, University of Oslo, Norway.

Participants

Published Oct. 4, 2024 11:00 AM - Last modified Jan. 23, 2026 2:21 PM