Events

The Great Frost of 1708/09: Enlightenment Thermometers and Representations of Climate Disruption

Location:

Sanders Classroom 212, Spitzer Auditorium

Tita Chico ’91, University of Maryland Professor of English, will discuss the literary history of 18th-century technology. The “Great Frost,” to the French, “Le Grand Hiver,” of 1708/09 brought three months of unbearable cold. Lakes and rivers froze, and animals died. Agriculture was wiped out—the wheat harvest devastated—and trees exploded. Travelers were found frozen to death on roads. In homes, many awoke to find their nightcaps frozen to their beds or to find family members frozen to death, impossible to move because they were frozen into their bedsheets. Frozen bread required an axe to break it. Climatologists today confirm that the Great Frost, which occurred during the Little Ice Age, was in fact the coldest winter in Europe in the last 500 years, with temperatures hitting lows of -12 C and -15 C. But how were these temperatures experienced and understood in the eighteenth century? In this talk, the Great Frost presents an occasion to think about climate disruption and its representation. Drawing upon the philosopher Sylvia Wynter’s model of biocentrism, I argue that William Derham’s accounts in Philosophical Transactions, among the earliest meteorological observations in England, and the newly developing scientific instrument of the thermometer, particularly the fictions of measurement, mastery, and scale advanced by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit’s mercury-in-glass thermometer, teach us new questions about how knowledge is produced, and also about new forms of social relations across space and time. How we record the weather says as much about the weather as it does about who and what we imagine ourselves to be.

This event is open to the public.

Sponsored by the English Department.

About Tita

Tita Chico (VC ’91) is a Professor of English at the University of Maryland. She is the author of three books, most recently On Wonder (Cambridge UP, 2025). This talk is drawn from her current book, Devices of Enlightenment: A Literary History of Technology.

An antique thermometer with a closeup detail.
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit's mercury-in-glass thermometer (c. 1720) Photo courtesy of the speaker