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Dive into the research topics where Adam Izdebski is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam Izdebski.


Journal of Interdisciplinary History | 2014

The Climate and Environment of Byzantine Anatolia: Integrating Science, History, and Archaeology

John Haldon; Neil Roberts; Adam Izdebski; Dominik Fleitmann; Michael McCormick; Marica Cassis; Owen Doonan; Warren J. Eastwood; Hugh Elton; Sabine Ladstätter; Sturt W. Manning; James Newhard; Kathleen Nicoll; Ioannes Telelis; Elena Xoplaki

The integration of high-resolution archaeological, textual, and environmental data with longer-term, low-resolution data affords greater precision in identifying some of the causal relationships underlying societal change. Regional and microregional case studies about the Byzantine world—in particular, Anatolia, which for several centuries was the heart of that world—reveal many of the difficulties that researchers face when attempting to assess the influence of environmental factors on human society. The Anatolian case challenges a number of assumptions about the impact of climatic factors on socio-political organization and medium-term historical evolution, highlighting the importance of further collaboration between historians, archaeologists, and climate scientists.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

History meets palaeoscience : Consilience and collaboration in studying past societal responses to environmental change

John Haldon; Lee Mordechai; Timothy P. Newfield; Arlen F. Chase; Adam Izdebski; Piotr Guzowski; Inga Labuhn; Neil Roberts

History and archaeology have a well-established engagement with issues of premodern societal development and the interaction between physical and cultural environments; together, they offer a holistic view that can generate insights into the nature of cultural resilience and adaptation, as well as responses to catastrophe. Grasping the challenges that climate change presents and evolving appropriate policies that promote and support mitigation and adaptation requires not only an understanding of the science and the contemporary politics, but also an understanding of the history of the societies affected and in particular of their cultural logic. But whereas archaeologists have developed productive links with the paleosciences, historians have, on the whole, remained muted voices in the debate until recently. Here, we suggest several ways in which a consilience between the historical sciences and the natural sciences, including attention to even distant historical pasts, can deepen contemporary understanding of environmental change and its effects on human societies.


Human Ecology | 2018

The Social Burden of Resilience: A Historical Perspective

Adam Izdebski; Lee Mordechai; Sam White

We examine the social burden associated with resilience to environmental shocks in pre-modern societies. We argue that analyses of state-level interventions to mitigate the consequences of catastrophic events tend to isolate these measures from their larger social contexts and thereby overlook the uneven distribution of their burden across different groups. We use three cases of pre-modern societies in the northeastern Mediterranean - the sixth century Roman Empire, the tenth century Byzantine Empire, and the sixteenth century Ottoman Empire. We demonstrate how the adaptive processes that reinforced resilience at the state level incurred different burdens for those at lower levels of the social hierarchy. We found that some groups sustained losses while others gained unexpected benefits in the context of temporary systemic instability. We also found that although elites enjoyed enhanced buffers against the adverse effects in comparison with non-elites, this did not consistently guarantee them a better outcome. We conclude that the differentiated burden of resilience could in some cases entrench existing political or economic configurations, and in other cases, overturn them. Our case studies indirectly address the pressing issue of environmental justice.


Journal of Interdisciplinary History | 2017

Bread and Class in Medieval Society: Foodways in Anatolia

Adam Izdebski; Marcin Jaworski; Handan Üstündağ; Arkadiusz Sołtysiak

Bread was a basic food staple as well as a marker of status in medieval societies. A study of Byzantine and Islamic textual sources combined with an archaeological scientific study of teeth remains from four excavated sites in modern Turkey demonstrates that literary stereotypes about access to high-quality bread may have held in densely populated urban settlements but not in society on a wider scale. Peasants, the lowest social group, also had access to high-quality bread. In regions inhabited by diverse groups, differences in food consumption did not depend on religion or culture.


Late Antique Archaeology | 2016

Climatic Changes and Their Impacts in the Mediterranean during the First Millennium AD

Inga Labuhn; Martin Finné; Adam Izdebski; Neil Roberts; Jessie Woodbridge

Many events and developments in human history have been suspected to be, at least partly, influenced by climate and environmental changes. In order to investigate climate impacts on societies, reli ...


Late Antique Archaeology | 2016

Environment, Climate and Society in Roman and Byzantine Butrint

Mario Morellón; Gaia Sinopoli; Adam Izdebski; Laura Sadori; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Richard Hodges; Eleonora Regattieri; Bernd Wagner; Brunhilda Brushulli; Daniel Ariztegui

A multiproxy analysis (sedimentology, geochemistry and pollen) of sediments recovered in the Butrint lagoon (Albania) allows us to reconstruct the environmental changes that occurred in the area during the 1st millennium AD. In this paper, we compare these analytical results with the evidence provided by archaeological investigations carried out at the site of the Roman city of Butrint (surrounded by these lagoon waters) and in the city’s hinterlands. From this, we can say that different periods of farming and siltation (AD 400–600 and 700–900) were accompanied by increased run-off and wetter conditions in the region. This coincided with the territorial and economic expansion of the Byzantine empire, suggesting the key role of trade in the profound land use changes experienced in Butrint.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

Climate, environment and society in southern Italy during the last 2000 years. A review of the environmental, historical and archaeological evidence

Laura Sadori; Carlo Giraudi; Alessia Masi; Michel Magny; Elena Ortu; Giovanni Zanchetta; Adam Izdebski


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

Realising consilience: How better communication between archaeologists, historians and natural scientists can transform the study of past climate change in the Mediterranean

Adam Izdebski; Karin Holmgren; Erika Weiberg; Sharon R. Stocker; Ulf Büntgen; Assunta Florenzano; Alexandra Gogou; Suzanne A.G. Leroy; Jürg Luterbacher; Belen Martrat; Alessia Masi; Anna Maria Mercuri; Paolo Montagna; Laura Sadori; Adam W. Schneider; Marie-Alexandrine Sicre; Maria Triantaphyllou; Elena Xoplaki


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

The environmental, archaeological and historical evidence for regional climatic changes and their societal impacts in the Eastern Mediterranean in Late Antiquity

Adam Izdebski; Jordan Pickett; Neil Roberts; Tomasz Waliszewski


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

The Medieval Climate Anomaly and Byzantium: A review of the evidence on climatic fluctuations, economic performance and societal change

Elena Xoplaki; Dominik Fleitmann; Juerg Luterbacher; Sebastian Wagner; John Haldon; Eduardo Zorita; Ioannis Telelis; Andrea Toreti; Adam Izdebski

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Maria Triantaphyllou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Belen Martrat

Spanish National Research Council

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Katerina Kouli

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Grzegorz Koloch

Warsaw School of Economics

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