"The sun was darkened for seventeen days (AD 797)". An interdisciplinary exploration of celestial phenomena between Byzantium, Charlemagne, and a volcanic eruption
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Ewald Kislinger

TL;DR
This interdisciplinary study examines the 8th-century celestial phenomena, especially the 17-day sun darkening in 797, linking historical events with volcanic activity and atmospheric effects to understand their impact on medieval perceptions.
Contribution
It offers a novel interdisciplinary analysis combining historical, astronomical, and geological data to explain the 797 sun darkening and its cultural significance.
Findings
Disproves previous hypotheses attributing the darkening to non-volcanic causes.
Supports volcanic eruption as the most probable cause of the 797 atmospheric phenomena.
Links celestial events to political and religious interpretations in Byzantium and Western Europe.
Abstract
The blinding of the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VI in Constantinople in August 797 and his overthrow by his mother Eirene, who then until 802 ruled as first female emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire, was used as legitimation for the coronation of the Frankish King Charlemagne as emperor of the Romans on December 25, 800, by contemporaries in Western Europe. Some observers in the West may have even interpreted the downfall of the Eastern Roman emperor and his replacement by a woman as sign of an impending collapse of the Roman Empire and the entire world order as already expected, based on chiliastic calculations. We equally find indications of apocalyptic expectations in Constantinople, where the blinding of Constantine was linked with a spectacular celestial manifestation of divine disapproval, a darkening of the sun for 17 days. In this paper, this obfuscation of the sun is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical and Architectural Studies · Tree-ring climate responses
