Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The Year 536 AD Was the Worst Year in Human History and Almost Nobody Knows About It

 Historians and scientists who study this period say that 536 AD was probably the worst year in human history to be alive.


Not a year of war. Not a year of plague. A year when the sky itself went dark.


What Happened in 536 AD


In early 536 AD a mysterious fog rolled in across Europe, the Middle East, and parts of Asia. It did not lift for eighteen months.


The fog blocked enough sunlight that temperatures across the Northern Hemisphere dropped significantly. Europe experienced the coldest decade in the past 2300 years. Summer temperatures fell by one and a half to two and a half degrees Celsius.


That does not sound like much. But it was enough to devastate agriculture across the entire region.


Crops failed. Snow fell in China during summer. Droughts hit Peru. Famine spread across vast areas of the world. People who survived the immediate food crisis faced years of starvation and social collapse.


The Chinese chronicler of the time wrote that the sun was bluish and gave little light. Other records from across the affected regions describe darkness, famine, and death on a massive scale.


What Caused It


Scientists now believe a massive volcanic eruption caused the fog. A volcano in Iceland is currently the leading candidate based on ice core evidence. The eruption would have thrown enough ash and sulfur into the upper atmosphere to block sunlight across much of the Northern Hemisphere for an extended period.


This kind of event is called a volcanic winter. It has happened multiple times in human history. The 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia caused what became known as the Year Without a Summer in 1816, which devastated harvests across North America and Europe and contributed to one of the worst famines of the nineteenth century.


The 536 event appears to have been worse. Much worse.


The effects did not end in 537. The disruption to climate patterns and food production contributed to conditions that made the Plague of Justinian, which killed tens of millions of people across the Roman Empire and beyond starting in 541, even more devastating than it would otherwise have been. Weakened and starving populations are more vulnerable to disease.


Why This Is Not Taught


Part of the reason this event is not widely known is that the records from that era are limited and scattered across multiple cultures and languages. Pulling together the full picture required both historical research and scientific analysis of ice cores, tree rings, and other physical evidence.


Part of it is also that the dark ages, roughly the period following the fall of the Western Roman Empire, tend to get less attention in standard history curricula than the periods before and after.


But this event shaped the history of an entire era. The famine and disease that followed the volcanic winter of 536 to 541 helped accelerate the collapse of the late Roman world and contributed to the conditions that defined the medieval period that followed.


Understanding it gives you a much richer picture of why that period of history looked the way it did.


History is not just about what people decided. It is about what the world threw at people and how they survived it. The year 536 is one of the most dramatic examples of that in the historical record. And almost nobody knows it happened.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Hedy Lamarr Was a Hollywood Star Who Invented the Technology That Became WiFi and Bluetooth

 Your WiFi. Your Bluetooth. Your GPS. The wireless communication technology that runs almost everything in your life right now.


A Hollywood actress invented the foundational concept behind all of it in 1942. Her name was Hedy Lamarr. And almost nobody knows who she was.


Who Hedy Lamarr Was


Hedy Lamarr was an Austrian-American actress who was one of the biggest film stars in Hollywood during the 1940s. She was also an inventor who taught herself engineering and spent her free time working on technical problems.


During World War Two she became concerned about the vulnerability of radio-guided torpedoes to signal jamming by the enemy. If an enemy could jam the frequency controlling a torpedo they could redirect it or neutralize it entirely.


She developed a solution. Working with composer George Antheil she invented a system called frequency hopping spread spectrum. The idea was that a signal could rapidly hop between different frequencies in a coordinated pattern that would be almost impossible to jam because an enemy would not know which frequency to block.


She and Antheil patented the invention in 1942 and donated the patent to the US government for use in the war effort.


What Happened to the Invention


The US Navy did not use it. They dismissed it and put it in a file.


The patent expired in 1959 before it was ever used commercially. Hedy Lamarr received nothing for it.


In the 1980s engineers working on wireless communication and spread spectrum technology developed systems that used the same basic principles she had patented decades earlier. That technology became the foundation for WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, and most modern wireless communication.


By the time the world began to recognize what she had done she was elderly and largely forgotten as both an actress and an inventor. She received a technical honor from an electronics engineers association in 1997. She died in 2000.


She was never compensated for the technology that now underlies a multi trillion dollar global wireless communications industry.


Why History Forgot Her


The pattern is one we have seen before. A woman made a significant contribution. Men in the field did not take it seriously at the time. The patent expired. Others built on the work later without crediting the original inventor. And the history books wrote about the men who commercialized the technology rather than the woman who invented the concept.


There are hundreds of stories like Hedy Lamarr's. Women who made foundational contributions to science, technology, medicine, and engineering who were ignored, uncredited, or deliberately written out of the record.


Every time we recover one of these stories it makes the picture of history more accurate and more complete.


Your phone works because of something a Hollywood actress figured out during World War Two. That is true. And it is remarkable. And it should be in the history books.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.


The US Government Experimented on Its Own Citizens Without Their Knowledge or Consent

 This is not a conspiracy theory. These are documented historical facts confirmed by government records, congressional investigations, and official apologies.


The United States government ran programs that experimented on its own citizens without their knowledge or consent. Some of those programs went on for decades. Most Americans still do not know the full picture of what happened.


The Tuskegee Syphilis Study


From 1932 to 1972 the US Public Health Service conducted a study on 399 Black men in Macon County Alabama who had syphilis.


The men were told they were receiving treatment for bad blood, a local term for a range of ailments. They were not told they had syphilis. They were not given treatment for it.


When penicillin became the standard cure for syphilis in the 1940s the researchers deliberately withheld it from the study participants so they could continue observing the progression of untreated syphilis.


The study went on for forty years. Twenty eight men died directly from syphilis. One hundred more died from related complications. Forty wives were infected. Nineteen children were born with congenital syphilis.


The study was only stopped in 1972 when a whistleblower leaked it to the press. In 1997 President Clinton formally apologized on behalf of the government.


The men who participated never consented to being part of a study. They were told they were being treated. They were being observed instead while their illness killed them.


MK Ultra


From the early 1950s through at least the late 1960s the CIA ran a program called MK Ultra. The goal was to develop mind control techniques. The methods included dosing people with LSD without their knowledge, sensory deprivation, psychological torture, hypnosis, and other techniques.


Some of the subjects were mental patients. Some were prisoners. Some were ordinary civilians who had no idea what was being done to them. Some were CIA employees who volunteered not knowing the full scope of what the experiments involved.


At least one person died as a direct result of the program. Frank Olson, a CIA scientist, died in a fall from a New York hotel window in 1953 after being secretly dosed with LSD. The government originally called it a suicide. Decades later his family had his body exhumed and a forensic examination suggested he may have been murdered.


The CIA destroyed most of the MK Ultra records in 1973 when the program was about to be exposed. What we know comes from the documents that survived and from congressional hearings held in 1977.


Why These Programs Existed


Both of these programs existed because the people running them decided that their goals were more important than the rights of the people they were experimenting on.


In Tuskegee it was a study of a disease in a population that researchers did not consider worthy of the same care and protection they would have given white patients.


In MK Ultra it was the Cold War logic that finding ways to control people's minds was worth whatever it cost in terms of the rights of the people being used in the experiments.


In both cases the people who were harmed were people with the least power to protect themselves. Black sharecroppers in Alabama. Mental patients. Prisoners. People who trusted institutions that were betraying them.


These programs are in the historical record. The government has acknowledged them. And they are still barely mentioned in most schools.


That should bother everyone.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.