Recorded Lectures

Rhind Lectures 2024

Our Rhind 2024 Lectures presented by Professor Richard Oram PhD FSA FRSA FSAScot.

The event took place at the Augustine United Church, 41 George IV Bridge, Edinburgh EH1 1EL and online as a Zoom meeting.

Two ‘little’ ice ages and an anomaly: climate, environment and cultural change in medieval and early modern Scotland

Our current climate emergency and its ecological and wider environmental consequences are concepts with which we are all familiar, but the impacts of historic climate change on the environment of Scotland and its people are little recognised or understood. Between the dawn of the ‘Late Antique little ice age’ in the 6th century CE to the waning of the ‘little ice age’ in the 19th century CE, climate change and how Scotland’s people responded to it was one of the most dynamic agents affecting environmental conditions and resources and a key stimulus of social and cultural transformation. From epidemic and epizootic disease to energy crises and transitions, ‘Golden Ages’ to ‘Ill Years’, this was an era where dearth, abundance, sustainability and resilience shaped Scotland.

Presented by Professor Richard Oram MA(Hons) PhD FSA FRSA FSAScot, University of Stirling

Richard Oram graduated MA (Hons) in Medieval History with Archaeology and PhD in Medieval History from the University of St Andrews. Appointed Lecturer in Scottish and Environmental History at the University of Stirling in 2002, Director of the Centre for Environmental History from 2005 and in 2007 becoming the first Chair in Environmental History in the UK, he has published extensively on the environmental histories of Scotland and the wider North Atlantic region, specialising in historic climate change, energy transitions and the impacts of epidemic disease.

 

Coire Chuiltran, Glen Almond - veteran Scots Pine