The Black Death. The Great Depression. The world wars. 2020.
But historians have looked at the data, weighed the suffering, and arrived at a single, chilling verdict:
AD 536 was the worst year in human history.
Not because of a war. Not because of a pandemic. Because the sun went out - and didn't come back for 18 months.
The Year of Darkness
In 536 AD, something strange happened across the entire Northern Hemisphere.
A mysterious, dry fog settled over the sky. It wasn't clouds. It wasn't weather. It was a thick, eerie haze that blocked the sun's warmth and turned daylight into a dim, cold twilight.
Contemporary sources described it in terrified terms:
The Byzantine historian Procopius wrote that "the sun gave forth its light without brightness, like the moon, during the whole year."
In China, chroniclers noted that the sun was "yellowish and dim" and that frost killed crops in summer.
In Europe, crops failed. Snow fell in August. People starved.
For 18 months, the sun hid. And the world began to die.
What Caused the Darkness?
For centuries, the cause was a mystery. But modern science has found the answer.






