List of coldest winters in history

The winter on Earth comes before humans invented a thermometer. However, based on historical figures, British scientists have recently released a ranking of the coldest winters in the history of humanity.

The whole world is experiencing one of the harshest winters in history. From Europe to Asia, from North to South, everywhere is snowy, cold. However, compared to the past winter in history, the temperature down to -17 degrees Celsius in Korea or Russia's -30 degrees Celsius is still much warmer.

According to the latest report of British scientists, winter 401 and 801 are the two coldest winters in history. At that time, the entire Black Sea was turned into a 'stone tray' .

In 859, the entire Adriatic Sea in eastern Italy also froze. One can walk from the east coast to the west coast to the city of Venice.

850 years later, this phenomenon is repeated. In the winter of 1010-1011, the entire area of ​​the Black Sea and Turkish coast was frozen. The ice spread all the way to the ' hot ' Africa, causing the Nil river to stop flowing because of the ice covering.

Picture 1 of List of coldest winters in history
Humans are experiencing one of the coldest winters in history?

In the winter of 1210-1211, the Po rivers in northern Italy and the Rona river in Romania were completely frozen. Meanwhile, the Adriatic Sea was once again frozen.

The next stand in the ' winter ranking ' is the winter of 1322, 1316, 1326, 1365, 1407-1408, 1420, 1468, 1558.

By the eighteenth century, the figures became more accurate with the advent of thermometers. Accordingly, in 1709, the whole city of Paris was submerged in snow and ice. The temperature dropped to -24 degrees Celsius for many days. The bottles of wine brewed in the cellar must also freeze. By 1795, the temperature in Paris dropped to -23 degrees Celsius.

In the twentieth century, the winter of 1953-1954 was considered to have the most terrible cold. The ice covered a large area from the Baltic to the Ural Mountains. Almost all the Northern Hemisphere sinks in cold .

Most recently in 2002 when waterway traffic in Europe was almost paralyzed because the water surface was frozen. Many boats caught in the ice with a thickness of up to 70cm.