...Great Poland with the cities of Ostrów,…
1707 CE
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The Hōei Eruption of Mount Fuji starts on December 16, 1707 (23rd day of the 11th month of the year Hōei 4) and ends about January 1, 1708 (9th day of the 12th month of the year Hōei 4) during the Edo period.Although it brings no lava flow, the Hoei eruption releases some eight hundred million cubic meters of volcanic ash, which spreads over vast areas around the volcano, even reaching Edo almost one hundred kilometers away.
Cinders and ash fall like rain in Izu, Kai, Sagami, and Musashi provinces.
In Edo, the volcanic ash is several centimeters thick.
The eruption occurs on Mount Fuji's east–northeast flank and forms three new volcanic vents, named No. 1, No. 2, and No. 3 Hōei vents.
The catastrophe develops over the course of several days—an initial earthquake and explosion of cinders and ash is followed some days later with the more forceful ejections of rocks and stones.
Mount Fuji has not erupted since.
...the Grodno province, at this time part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, amounting to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania’s Trakai Voivodship, a unit of administrative division and local government.
Jews are forced to pay a fine for “not supporting” the Russians.
From Kraków, the plague spreads to Lesser Poland (the surrounding area), Mazovia (including the city of Warsaw) and ...
Health certificates have been compulsory for travelers from Poland from 1704.