Wednesday, 14 March 2018

In 1703, Britain was struck by possibly its worst ever storm


The Great Storm of 1703 caused damage across southern Britain, and encouraged novelist Daniel Defoe to write a pioneering book of journalism and science.


On the night of 7 December 1703, the United Kingdom was visited by an extreme weather event.
Following weeks of wind and rain, a cyclone blew through the country at midnight, from the Welsh coasts to the Midlands and the south of England, hitting the cities of Bristol and London in particular. The storm also wreaked havoc in continental Europe, causing severe damage in the Netherlands, the Danish islands and Germany.
Remembered through history as the "Great Storm of 1703", it is a contender for the worst storm Britain has ever seen. Queen Anne described it as "a Calamity so Dreadful and Astonishing, that the like hath not been Seen or Felt, in the Memory of any Person Living in this Our Kingdom."

 Surce:  BBCNews

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