- Cristina J. Orgaz @cjorgaz
- BBC News World
2 hours
The drought in Europe is uncovering a sinister warning from our ancestors presaging periods of misery.
The so-called “hunger stones” are rocks in riverbeds that are only visible when water levels are extremely low.
Carved into them, ancient peoples left messages regarding catastrophes triggered by lack of water and reminders of the hardships experienced during droughts.
The inscriptions go back decades and centuriesexplained the user @Batallitass in a tweeter thread that has gone viral these days.
The oldest inscription found in the Elbe river basin dates from 1616 and is in German.
Its translation is “If you see me, cry”.
It is particularly famous because its inhabitants chiseled on its surface the dates of severe droughts.
According to a study carried out in 2013 by a Czech team, the years 1417, 1616, 1707, 1746, 1790, 1800, 1811, 1830, 1842, 1868, 1892 and 1893 can be read on it.
“Life will bloom once more once this stone disappears”, reads another of the carved rocks.
“The one who once saw me, cried. The one who sees me now will cry,” predicts one more.
“If you see this stone once more, you will cry. That’s how shallow the water was in 1417,” says another.
Stones that announce poverty
And it is that in the past, that the water reached those such low levels meant poverty and lack for many cities.
The drought brought ruin to the crops but also cut off the waterways that brought foodsupplies of all kinds and charcoal for cooking, threatening the livelihood of families living along the coast.
And following that came the famines.
Formerly, the area of Central Europe, which includes parts of Germany, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria and Hungarydepended on the fertile land on the banks of the rivers to produce food.
In fact, in Germany these stones are known as “Hungersteine”.
The twitter user says that the name comes from an inscription on one of them, “Hungerjahr 1947” or Year of the famine 1947.
“After the end of World War II, Germany suffered a great famine in the winter of 1946-1947. Three major cold snaps made life difficult for the population. In January 1947, 60 kilometers of the Rhine froze,” explains @Batallitass.
River navigation came to a standstill, cutting off a vital transportation route that brought coal for heating and food.
Many people They died of hunger and cold.
In recent years, the phenomenon of drought has become the most prominent manifestation of climate change in Central Europe.
reminders of the past
One of the towns to expose more stones is Děčín, a city in the north of the Czech Republic, where the Elbe and Ploučnice rivers converge and very close to the border with Germany.
The Elbe River rises in the Czech Republic and flows through Germany to the North Sea.
In its flow up to a dozen of these stones appear, reminding the local population of a hard period in the past.
Another hunger stone is exhibited in the muse of the city of Schönebeckan ancient tombstone that lay in a harbor basin and on which particularly low water levels were carved.
In 1904 the water dropped to 47 cm and the visibility of this stone it indicated to the boats that the flow was not sufficient to navigate.
In addition to the stones, several stones have been found in the river bed. WWII bombs without exploding.
Most of the “hunger stones” are found in the Elbe River, although they have also appeared in the Rhine, the Mosel, the Mündesee or the Weser.
extreme drought
In recent weeks, France and Spain have had to restrict water consumption due to a severe drought.
In parts of both countries, the authorities have been forced to cut off the supply in certain circumstances.
The French government declared that the country is facing the worst drought in recorded history.
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