2 Matching Annotations
  1. Feb 2026
    1. Diet and caloric intake, along with epidemic disease, famine, war, and other disasters, kept human life expectancy much shorter than it is today. In many of the richest and most advanced parts of the premodern world, from China and Japan in East Asia to England and Germany in Europe, life expectancies at birth were thirty to forty years,23 or half of what they are today for most of the developed world

      In the premodern world, people didn’t live as long because of poor diets, disease, famine, and war. Even in rich countries, most people only lived about thirty to forty years, which is much shorter than today.

    2. It now appears that climate change was a general cause of the premodern population increases around the world. Given the interest in our current problem of global warming, historians and climatologists have reconstructed past climates and have indeed found significant variations in temperatures and rainfall.

      This passage says that climate change helped populations grow in the premodern world. Better temperatures and rainfall made farming easier, which supported more people. Because of today’s global warming concerns, historians and scientists have studied past climates and found that temperature and rainfall have changed a lot over time.