Every day, morning is the dawn of the course. Based on the laws of science, it is expected that the sun will rise each day from east to west. However, the question must be asked, "What would happen if the sun has not risen?" This was the case from AD 535 to AD 546, with the darkest days in AD 536
"A tremendous roar of thunder" came from the mountain, there was a violent shaking of the earth, complete darkness, thunder and lightning "1 A.Chinese court journal also mentions a "huge sound roaring from the south-west" in February, as the Hopi elders 535.2 And said, thousands of miles away could hear, "When you start editing, there is a large noise throughout the land, "a low growl reverberated 3 around the planet.
"Then came a furious storm with torrential rains and deadly storm darkened the entire world," reads the pustaka Raja purwa or Book of Ancient Kings, abury Indonesian chronicle.4
"The sun began to go out, rain poured red, like blood-stained. Clouds of dust enveloped the earth ... the yellow dust rained like snow. It may be picked up by the handful," wrote the Shi Nan 5 Chronicle of Ancient southern China, the climate of the country in November and December 535
Darkness, followed by the day not at night. "It was a symbol of the sun that never evenseen or reported. The sun became dark and the darkness lasted for about 18 months. It seemed every day for about 4 hours and still this light was only a faint shadow. Everyone says that the sun would never recover full light again. The ripe fruit is not eaten sour grapes and the wine as, "6 John of Ephesus, a Syrian bishop and contemporary writers, wrote in the description of the infinite darkness." The sun became dim ... for most of the year ... so thatthe fruits have been killed in a wrong time, "said John Lydus, which was carried out Prokop, a prominent Roman historian who served as chief archivist and secretary of the Emperor Justinian, when he wrote of 536, said:" .. . This year held a sign very afraid. For the sun gave off its light without brightness, like the moon, during this year ... and it looked very similar to the sun in eclipse, for the beams is shed were not clear. "7"The sun seems lost ... to have his normal light, and seems to be a bluish color. We marvel to see shadows of our bodies at noon, to feel the great power of the sun into heat wasted weakness," Flavius Cassiodorus 8 , Roman historian wrote another. Report also noted that the lunch consisted of "almost dark as night." 9
Then the world caught a cold, the temperatures dropped. "We had a winter without storms ..." 10 "a springwithout mercy [and] a summer without heat ... The months that have been maturing the crops have been chilled by north winds should, "wrote 11 Cassiodorus." When can we hope for the mild climate, now that the months that once the crop has become ripe for death under the blows of the north? ... For all items, these two are against us: eternal frost and drought unnatural, "12, added 13, while in China, it was written," the stars in terms of lossthree months. The sun darkened, the rain could fall and snow in summer. Widespread famine, and the emperor gave his capital ... "Veil of dust," obscuring the sky called "14 Other Chinese records, '" writes the historian of the Mediterranean during a "' 'dry fog blocking most of the heat of the sun for more than a year." 15 The sun was so ineffective that the snow also fell in the month of August in southern China and in each month of the year, in the northEurope.
"Then came the drought [or floods], famine, pestilence, death ..." ".. And 'the food is the foundation of the kingdom of gold and 10,000 strings of cash can not cure hunger thousand cases What helps him with pearls, cold, hungry," complained 16 Great King in 540 Japanese, while the 'Cassiodorus added: "Rain is denied and the reaper fears new cold." 17 And "as the harsh winter and the drought continues in the second and third year [in Mongolia andParts of China, the Avars] without food, without food from other barter find ... , "A 3000 miles trip started new countries for themselves and their families from destruction and save starvation.18
During this long period of unusually cold temperatures of 535-546, when the sun has been deleted, and ineffective, experienced failure of plant growth - failed, and many cultures - tree rings from this period show little or no growth. On climate researchMarkus Lindholm presented in 2001 by the University of Helsinki, Finland, sudden changes in the northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures from 7500-year ring width chronology of pine, extracts the "drastic change in growing conditions, favorable to unfavorable, between 2 years took place between 535-536 AD "in Europe and Africa.19 His discoveries by Mike Baillie University of Belfast, who based his tree-ring chronologies have been confirmed by someSamples preserved in bogs, said that thousands of years ago: "It 'was a catastrophic environmental crisis that manifests itself in the trees around the world.20 enough temperatures dropped to the growth of trees, for Northern Europe, Siberia, Western North America and to prevent spread of southern South America. " Unfortunately, the cold has brought 21 rats, mice and fleas, which was normally used outdoors, in homes of people in search of food and heat through the decimation ofmind in the animal population suddenly hostile, cool, dark place. Deadly bacterium, Yersinia pestis was then transferred to the people and their pets.
In the dark, resulting in infinite chaos "have been wiped out entire towns -. civilization collapsed," as established in Europe and 22 wars raging in the Middle East, affluent societies were deprived of food and wealth, the economy collapsed and died of large areas of population, diseases and parasites. "Withsome people started in the head, the eye was swollen and bloody face, went up to her neck and then remove them from humanity. For others, it was a flow of the bowel. Some came in buboes [pus-filled swellings] which gave rise to great fevers, and die two or three days later with her head under the same conditions as those who had suffered nothing and with their bodies still robust. Others have lost consciousness before dying. Malignant pustules erupted andwith them. Sometimes people once or twice and suffered again, only to sacrifice a third time and then succumb, "23 Evagrius, wrote a sixth-century church historian. In the final stage, the people", usually in a semi-conscious, lethargy, and not ... eat and drink. After this phase, the victim would be attacked by madness ... Many people died painfully when their tumors gangrene. A number of victims has broken with black blisters covering theirBody, and they died quickly. "24
Within seven years because of the ivory trade, where ships brought rats and sailors of the plague, Europe and the Middle East have been infected devastated. In Constantinople alone, "he had more than 10,000 bodies disposed of day, week after week, they threw into the sea by special vessels, blocked in the towers of the walls, filling cisterns, digging orchards. The soldiers were forced to mass graves. dig chaos ..and chaos [ruled]. Constantinople smelled months after months [from rotting corpses, which were filled and stacked in towers or deposited roads] ... [And] if the number of deaths has reached a quarter of a million, officials simply stopped Constantinople counting.25
A ratio of income per capita was as follows: "At first, the family and household, attended the burial of the dead, but as the violence of the plague increased this duty was neglected and abandoned corpsesis narrow in the streets, but also in the homes of men whose servants were so sick or dead. Aware of this, Justinian placed large sums of Theodore, one of his private secretaries, to take measures for the disposal of the dead. Was huge [holding up to 70,000 bodies could] have been excavated Sycae on the side of the Golden Horn, where the bodies in rows and walked firmly, but men who were employed in this work, unable to keep pace pace with the numberthe dying man, mounted the towers of the city walls, tore the roofs and threw the body in almost all the towers were full of corpses, and as a result of "a bad smell pervaded the city and the people need even more, especially when The wind blew fresh from that part. '"26
Out of fear, many people refused to venture outside their homes - "... The houses were tombs, as whole families died of the plague without anyone fromthe outside world even knowing. Roads were deserted ... "27 Furthermore, because of this fear and / or the effects of suffering from high fever, hallucinations, dozens of people who see apparitions and visions. And with the great plague and destruction around them, many could not help but wonder If the apocalypse described in Revelation 06:08: "And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death," was with them 28.
It 'was so bad that some30 years later, Pope Gregory the Great wrote of Rome, "ruins of ruins ... Where is the Senate? Where [are] people? All the magnificence of the secular dignity has been destroyed ... And we, the few we decided to stay, we turned scourges every day and countless attempts are threatened. "29 At the height of the plague" depopulated city, the land became a desert and made man to storm the homes of wild animals "30, while in Africa, no longer exist for the main portsagricultural practices and almost disappeared.
"[And] how [other] left the city in question [wearing identification tags so that their body is buried, if it were established] brought the plague cities, villages and farms throughout the empire. [And, for make trade and commerce virtually non-existent, food was scarce, the hunger of others] 0.31 million died Untold ", 32, with a death toll estimated at 100 million, the worst pandemic in humansHistory.
"Elite Scandinavian" weak despair "sacrificed to appease a large amount of gold ... the gods angry and return to the sunlight." In Mesoamerica and 33, the Andes town "of perhaps a million people" emptied "from day to day" of hunger and disease. Peoples to their gods and goddesses, violent images and destroy their temple and burning towards the end, they become brutally fought against each other"Wild and warlike." 34
When the sun finally came out, overcoming the effects of a massive volcanic eruption, although it was not really gone, while minimizing the negative impact and save animals from extinction all, the world was changed forever. Countries and cultures have ceased to exist, while others proved to be the days of darkness "weakened the Eastern Roman Empire, created horrendous living conditions in the western part of the GreatEngland, from floods and the collapse of a major center of civilization in Yemen; drought ... contributed to the fall of Teotihuacan civilization in Mexico, "35, but major upheavals in China and France has occurred. More than half the world's population to the removal of Europe, Asia, Africa and America to consider, perished along with lots of plants and animals, were that the fragile relationship between people and givesNature.
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1 Krakatoa. WAS Inc., 2000. March 2, 2006.
[Http: / / www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm]
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3 precursor and the Pole Shift Earth Changes from 2000-2001. WAS Inc., 2000. April 27, 2006.[Http: / / www.huttoncommentaries.com/PSResearch/PrecursorOfPS&EC2000.htm]
4 Krakatau. WAS Inc., 2000. March 2, 2006.
[Http: / / www.huttoncommentaries.com/ECNews/SuperVolc/Krakatau/Krakatau1.htm]
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Henry N. 6 Pollack. Science uncertain ... uncertain world. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) 197
7 The Middle Ages, caused by volcanic activity? September23, 2001. April 27, 2006. http://www.hi.is/ ~ Joner / EAP / ds_darka.htm and Everything2: The disaster of September 14, 2001 535. April 27, 2006. http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691
8 PBS program - "Secrets Of The Dead." May 15, 2005. March 2, 2006.
~ http://www.hbci.com/ wenonah/history/535ad.htm
9 Climate change to 535-536. Wikipedia. 2006 April 27, 2006.
http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1
Everything2 10:The catastrophe of September 14, 2001 535. April 27, 2006.
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691
11 SEMP Biot # 214: If a Krakatoa eruption in 535, with the decline in rainfall of antiquity and the spread of Islam? April 27, 2006. http://www.semp.us/biots/biot_214.html
Everything2 12: The disaster of September 14, 2001 535. April 27, 2006.
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1158691
13 Disaster! Part I. April 27, 2006.[Http: / / www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html]
14 Mike Baillie. He asteroids and comets Turn The Tides of civilization? Discovering Archaeology July / August 1999. April 28, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/714636/posts
15 6. Bad harvests century comet collision? Chronicle. February 4, 2004. April 28, 2006. http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002037.html
16 Disaster! Part I. April 27, 2006.[Http: / / www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html]
17 Disaster! Part I. April 27, 2006. [Http: / / www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html]
18 Disaster! New Internationalist. December 1999. April 27, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm
19 Markus Lindholm. Abrupt changes in the northern Fennoscandian summer temperatures from 7500-year ring width chronology of pine won. 27 to 31 August 2001. April 28, 2006.http://atlas-conferences.com/c/a/g/c/74.htm
20 catastrophic event was preceded by Dark Ages - scientist. Reuters. September 8, 2000. April 28, 2006. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39b91ca42b27.htm
21 Laura Knight-Jadczyk. Jupiter, Nostradamus, Edgar Cayce and the return of the Mongols. March 9, 2004. April 28, 2006. http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/Laura-Knight-Jadczyk/article-lkj-04-03-06-d.htm
22 Disaster! Part I. April 27, 2006.[Http: / / www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe1_script.html]
23 Disaster! New Internationalist. December 1999. April 27, 2006. http://www.newint.org/issue319/cat.htm
Christine A. Smith 24. Plague in the ancient world: a study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997 April 28, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu/ ~ history/journal/1996-7/Smith.html
25 Disaster! Part II April 27, 2006. [Http: / / www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe2_script.html]
26 JB Bury.The story of the late Roman Empire. (New York: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., 1923).
Christine A. Smith 27. Plague in the ancient world: a study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997 April 28, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu/ ~ history/journal/1996-7/Smith.html
28 A. Miguel Faria Jr., MD. Medical history - plagues and epidemics. 2002 April 28, 2006. http://www.haciendapub.com/faria4.html
Abominations of desolation 29. April 28, 2006.[Http: / / www.whyprophets.com / Lostprophets / a_of_d.htm]
30 Roy Porter. The Black Death. April 28, 2006. http://www.strath.ac.uk/Departments/History/barton/ds11.htm
Christine A. Smith 31. Plague in the ancient world: a study from Thucydides to Justinian. 1997 April 28, 2006. http://www.loyno.edu/ ~ history/journal/1996-7/Smith.html
32 Disaster! Part II April 27, 2006. [Http: / / www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/flash/catastrophe2_script.html]
Climate Change 33 535-536.Wikipedia. 2006 April 27, 2006.
http://www.answers.com/topic/climate-changes-of-535-536-1
Dr. Farhat-Holzman laina 34. Climate change, volcanoes, and epidemics - the new tools of history. Globalthink.net. January 23, 2003. April 27, 2006. [Http: / / www.globalthink.net/global/dsppaper.cfm?ArticleID=96]
35 Brian Micklethwait. DC 535. December 25, 2002. April 28, 2006. http://www.samizdata.net/blog/archives/002719.html
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