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<strong>The</strong> <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> c1450-1800<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>early</strong> <strong>modern</strong> sources <strong>and</strong> their potential<br />

for marine environmental history<br />

Poul Holm<br />

Maibritt Bager<br />

Centre for Maritime <strong>and</strong> Regional History<br />

University of Southern Denmark<br />

<strong>Danish</strong> sources provide a rich potential for the environmental historian for reconstructing<br />

long time series for the inshore <strong>fisheries</strong> by regions from the North Sea to the Baltic.<br />

Examples are drawn primarily from sixteenth <strong>and</strong> seventeenth century records but the paper<br />

points also to the possibility for extending the time series. <strong>The</strong> estate records reveal the<br />

diversity of <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> at the peak of the fishing effort by the late Middle Ages 1450-<br />

1590. Haddock played a larger role for the fishery than cod <strong>and</strong> was presumably much more<br />

abundant than today. <strong>The</strong> herring catch records reveal decadal to centennial shifts in<br />

abundance between the Limfjord <strong>and</strong> Bohuslen, possibly related to climate forcing. <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> declined rapidly in the seventeenth century. Possible causes of the decline are<br />

discussed at the end of the paper, such as the importance of climatic change, salinity changes,<br />

species competition, <strong>and</strong> economic factors such as changing dietary preferences <strong>and</strong> market<br />

competition.<br />

<strong>Danish</strong> historical sources<br />

In medieval <strong>and</strong> <strong>early</strong> <strong>modern</strong> times till 1658, the Kingdom of Denmark in addition to its<br />

present entities of Jutl<strong>and</strong>, Funen, Seal<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> Bornholm included the provinces of present-<br />

day Southern Sweden namely Scania, Hall<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> Blekinge. For this reason, the archival<br />

deposits for these provinces followed <strong>Danish</strong> administrative practice. Furthermore, Norway,


which is not covered in this paper, also followed <strong>Danish</strong> administrative practice as a part of<br />

the <strong>Danish</strong> kingdom till 1814. We therefore have a uniform coverage of information of highly<br />

saline to brackish waters bordering the North Sea <strong>and</strong> the Baltic, including the straits of the<br />

Skagerrak <strong>and</strong> Kattegat at the entry of the Baltic, <strong>and</strong> the brackish Limfjord. A wide range of<br />

sources may provide information on <strong>Danish</strong> medieval <strong>and</strong> <strong>early</strong> <strong>modern</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> but for the<br />

construction of long time series the regional estate accounts of fiscal revenue are of especial<br />

importance. <strong>The</strong>ir main information is related to fishing effort as the taxes were levied either<br />

on the boat (the North Sea s<strong>and</strong> toll) or on the individual fisherman (the Baltic oar toll).<br />

Another important source of information on fishery effort is the accounts of the King’s<br />

catches on a specified day at the Limfjord. Trade records, mainly port records <strong>and</strong> the Sound<br />

Toll Records, are of importance to assess exports <strong>and</strong> provide a proxy for total catches. Other<br />

sources of information are eighteenth <strong>and</strong> nineteenth century national surveys. <strong>The</strong> sources<br />

have been analysed by the authors in various published <strong>and</strong> ongoing studies of which this<br />

paper may be read as a summary interim report. Other valuable sources like the sources on the<br />

export trade to the various Baltic <strong>and</strong> North Sea towns will not be considered here as they<br />

constitute a vast remit<br />

which call for specialist<br />

evaluation..<br />

<strong>The</strong> North Sea<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> of the<br />

<strong>Danish</strong> North Sea coast<br />

were dispersed along the<br />

entire littoral but the<br />

main concentration was


around the Reef of the Horn for the haddock fishery. <strong>The</strong> tax was levied on the boat, 1200<br />

haddock were paid by large boats with crews of twelve men, while smaller boats paid half.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fishery was first mentioned in<br />

the thirteenth century <strong>and</strong> seems to<br />

have culminated in the first half of<br />

the sixteenth century when<br />

quantitative sources become<br />

available (see Figure 1). In the<br />

second half of the sixteenth century a<br />

long term decline occurred. <strong>The</strong><br />

decline in fiscal returns was<br />

compensated by a new tax on the plaice fishery apparently introduced around 1550, <strong>and</strong><br />

which for a time made up for the loss to the King in financial terms. By 1630 the <strong>fisheries</strong><br />

were much reduced <strong>and</strong> remained at a very depressed state through the following two<br />

centuries.<br />

<strong>The</strong> species composition of the tax returns shows a variety of fish (see Figure 2).<br />

Evidently, the main fishery in the medieval period was for haddock but flatfishes were as<br />

important by the later sixteenth century. <strong>The</strong> relative importance of these two categories of<br />

fish alternated again in the 1630s <strong>and</strong> 1640s when the haddock/whiting were more important<br />

than the flatfish but altogether on a much reduced level. Other species are in evidence later,<br />

<strong>and</strong> very likely also were caught earlier, but were only taxed when the other <strong>fisheries</strong><br />

declined. <strong>The</strong> long-term trend for all species, however, was of almost uninterrupted decline.<br />

One point of dramatic decline st<strong>and</strong>s out, namely the years 1627-8 when Jutl<strong>and</strong> was occupied<br />

by a Swedish force. <strong>The</strong> fishing settlements seem to have suffered a severe blow from which<br />

they never recovered. However, the long-term decline was not determined by this single


episode but had begun already by the end of the sixteenth century.<br />

Farther to the north in Bøvling county the fishery was not as intense (see Figure 3).<br />

In <strong>modern</strong> times, this part of the coast is the centre of a large inshore fishery on cod but the<br />

lack of intensity may be explained by the remoteness of the coast relative to the large market<br />

in Hamburg <strong>and</strong> Schleswig. <strong>The</strong> tax returns show an increased fishery in both cod <strong>and</strong><br />

haddock/whiting in the first decades of the seventeenth century. <strong>The</strong> cod fishery was<br />

conducted from the northern parishes while the haddock/whiting fishery was carried out only<br />

by boats from the southernmost parish <strong>and</strong> may have been located in the Reef of the Horn<br />

area as was the Riberhus fishery. By the 1620s this fishery declined rapidly <strong>and</strong> was reported<br />

for the last time in 1630. <strong>The</strong> decline occurred at the same time as a new fishery on ray was<br />

conducted but this disappeared even before the end of the haddock fishery. <strong>The</strong> cod fishery<br />

was related to the ray fishery as the accounts sometimes give a combined total catch of cod<br />

<strong>and</strong> ray, <strong>and</strong> the cod fishery declined somewhat during the period of the ray fishery. A peak of<br />

the cod fishery was reached in the 1630s, <strong>and</strong> the <strong>fisheries</strong> were stable through the 1640s if<br />

we disregard the figures of 1644-45 which were influenced by a new Swedish invasion. In the<br />

1650s the fishing effort declined. A couple of Jutl<strong>and</strong> estates remain to be analysed but it is


known that by the mid-sixteenth century the total revenue of the northernmost counties of the<br />

North Sea coast Skodborg <strong>and</strong> V<strong>and</strong>fuld counties <strong>and</strong> Harboøre amounted to 20,000 haddock<br />

<strong>and</strong> the revenue of Thisted Bispegård was 14,000 haddock. <strong>The</strong> total <strong>fisheries</strong> for the northern<br />

half of the <strong>Danish</strong> North Sea coast thus amounted to roughly half the amount of Riberhus<br />

county.<br />

We have no evidence for the Skagerrak coast but the most important fishery certainly<br />

was conducted from the town of Skagen. As citizens they were relieved of the s<strong>and</strong> toll, <strong>and</strong><br />

hence our sources of information are meagre. We do know that in 1583 Skagen had an armed<br />

citizenry of 335 men, 1 <strong>and</strong> based on this number a guess of 4-500 active fishermen may not be<br />

wide of the mark. In comparison Riberhus county had a fishing population of around 1,200<br />

men. 2 Skagen’s fish resources were, however, more plentiful because of the rich fishing banks<br />

around the Scaw.<br />

1 C. Klitgaard, Skagen Bys Historie (Skagen, 1928) 36.<br />

2 Calculated from the total of 151 boats in the estate account for 1581 at an average of<br />

eight men per boat. <strong>The</strong> average is indicated by sources cited in Kinch, Ribe Bys Historie II,<br />

863-4.


We do not as yet have a complete picture of the development of the West Jutl<strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> in the later seventeenth <strong>and</strong> eighteenth centuries for lack of investigation of the estate<br />

records after 1660. Trade figures do, however, provide a clear indication of developments (see<br />

Figure 4). <strong>The</strong> export of Ribe declined from one million flatfish in 1600 to 300,000 pieces in<br />

1700, <strong>and</strong> was halved in the next 30 years. <strong>The</strong> trade of the other main outlets of Hjerting <strong>and</strong><br />

Ringkøbing was just as bad, <strong>and</strong> although the figures are less than complete due to the<br />

destruction of of many customs records, there is no doubt that the West Jutl<strong>and</strong> fish exports<br />

had almost completely ceased by the end of the eighteenth century.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Limfjord<br />

<strong>The</strong> ecosystem of the Limfjord is known to have been exposed to recurrent dramatic changes<br />

through the last millennium with several changes from highly saline to brackish water.<br />

Archeofaunal investigations have documented that the fiord fishery of the Iron <strong>and</strong> Viking<br />

ages was dominated by plaice <strong>and</strong> eel at a time when the fiord must have been highly saline as<br />

the fiord was open both to the north <strong>and</strong> west for North Sea water of 3.5% salinity. 3 Rising<br />

l<strong>and</strong> level closed the entries to the fiord sometime in the eleventh century, preempting the<br />

inflow of salt water from the North Sea. By 1200 the fiord was reported to have a rich herring<br />

fishery, <strong>and</strong> the herring seems to have adapted to alternating brackish <strong>and</strong> saline water<br />

conditions, as the fiord was its main feeding area through the spring before it migrated into<br />

the 3% saline conditions of the Kattegat for spawning. In 1624 the fiord was opened to the<br />

west by a storm. <strong>The</strong> herring stock seems to have suffered from the influx of North Sea water<br />

as the <strong>fisheries</strong> were reported to be much depressed by the <strong>early</strong> 1630s. In the next few years<br />

the breach of the s<strong>and</strong> dunes closed <strong>and</strong> the stock recovered. A well-documented repetition of<br />

the scenario occurred in 1825 when a breach of the coastline caused the herring to be first<br />

3 Inge Bødker Enghoff,


caught in large numbers <strong>and</strong> then to become<br />

extinct within a decade. <strong>The</strong> fiord was now kept artificially open, <strong>and</strong> the fiord was again<br />

occupied by plaice <strong>and</strong> eel.<br />

<strong>The</strong> herring fishery was mainly conducted by large <strong>and</strong> very expensive pound nets<br />

owned by urban merchants of Aalborg. <strong>The</strong> fishery seems to have been fully developed by the<br />

<strong>early</strong> sixteenth century when in 1518 the royal privileged purchase (kongekøb) amounted to<br />

528 barrels of herring. 4 In the 1600s the annual kongekøb oscillated between 400 <strong>and</strong> 900<br />

barrels in periods of good harvests. As 1518 was not a particularly good year for Aalborg’s<br />

trade, the harvesting potential of the fiord seems already to have been exploited to the full by<br />

the <strong>early</strong> sixteenth century. This impression is reinforced by the intense legislative effort on<br />

the part of the King to control fishing effort by strict regulations of mesh size <strong>and</strong> the<br />

allotment of fishing grounds to a limited number of pound nets.<br />

<strong>The</strong> sources of the kongekøb privilege for the seventeenth century <strong>and</strong> the export<br />

trade figures of Aalborg’s exports to the Baltic for the eighteenth century give an impression<br />

of the periodicity of the fishery (Figures 5 <strong>and</strong> 6). <strong>The</strong> fishing was depressed in the <strong>early</strong><br />

1600s <strong>and</strong> peaked 1610-20. A lacuna of the 1620s prevents us from following the impact of<br />

the 1624 flood, but the figures from 1631 reveal a fishery which is being built up to a new<br />

peak in the 1640s, with a new decline by 1654. <strong>The</strong>n followed a long depression which is<br />

4 Jan Kock, Næringsliv og samfærdsel. Aalborgs historie I, (Aalborg, 1992) 355.


the <strong>early</strong> 1750s when the Baltic export disappeared.<br />

attested in other sources as well, <strong>and</strong><br />

which was finally relieved by a very<br />

good fishery beginning in the 1670s <strong>and</strong><br />

peaking around the 1690s <strong>and</strong> again in<br />

1706. From then on the fishery followed<br />

a decadal pattern of ups <strong>and</strong> downs at a<br />

relatively high but declining scale until<br />

Aalborg’s Baltic exports were matched by a trade to Norway for which unfortunately<br />

we only have information dating from 1722 to 1764 (Figure 7). <strong>The</strong> added information of the<br />

Norway trade modifies the impression of the fishery gained from the Baltic trade figures. On<br />

the one h<strong>and</strong>, the basic picture of rise <strong>and</strong> decline is confirmed. Cl<strong>early</strong> the fishery was of<br />

considerable importance. In addition to the Norwegian export we must allow for an internal<br />

<strong>Danish</strong> trade which would certainly have brought total trade well above 50,000 barrels of<br />

herring in the 1720s. After this peak the Norway trade declined through the next three decades<br />

to a very low level in the 1760s. On the other h<strong>and</strong>, the Norway trade figures show that the<br />

fishery although much reduced by 1760 did continue. While the overall decline may be<br />

explained by a declining stock, the complete cessation of the Baltic trade after the mid 1750s<br />

must be related to another phenomenon, namely the rise of the Swedish herring fishery. From<br />

1756 the herring fishery in the Skagerrak <strong>and</strong> Kattegat archipelago of Bohuslen began a half<br />

century of unrivalled dominance of the Northern European herring market. <strong>The</strong> Aalborg<br />

merchants, already undercut by the decline of their own herring stock, were unable to<br />

compete with the massive availability of cheap Bohuslen herring. Aalborg’s herring fishery<br />

was thus much reduced, <strong>and</strong> while Aalborg continued to compete favourably in Norway<br />

where <strong>Danish</strong> merchants enjoyed customs protection, the town lost the Baltic market.


<strong>The</strong> Limfjord herring was reported to be caught in large quantities in 1808, exactly<br />

the year when the Bohuslen fishery collapsed. <strong>The</strong> following years to 1832 saw a renewed<br />

rise of the Limfjord herring fishery. <strong>The</strong> towns of Aalborg <strong>and</strong> Nibe experienced tremendous<br />

wealth at a time when the rest of the country suffered the consequences of Denmark’s<br />

misfortune in the Napoleonic wars. Extant records of the catches per day through one year of<br />

a typical fishing weir reveals a very high productivity. In 1825, however, the s<strong>and</strong> dunes<br />

which blocked the inflow of salt water from the North Sea to the Limfjord were breached by a<br />

flood, <strong>and</strong> the fiord turned salty after 800 years of brackish conditions. <strong>The</strong> consequences to<br />

the herring stock seemed beneficial at first. <strong>The</strong> catches rose to an all time high over the next<br />

three years but then catches dwindled dramatically. By 1832 the fishery was considered<br />

extinct.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Bohuslen fishery<br />

<strong>The</strong> Aalborg <strong>and</strong> Buhuslen fish merchants seem to have experienced alternating fates through<br />

the sixteenth to <strong>early</strong> nineteenth century. <strong>The</strong> bleak 1660s of Aalborg were good years for<br />

Bohuslen, <strong>and</strong> again the decline of Aalborg in the 1750s was matched by an unprecedented<br />

growth of the Bohuslen fishery. For this paper, which is concerned only with the <strong>Danish</strong><br />

sources, we shall restrict ourselves to the sixteenth-century evidence. Bohuslen was then a<br />

Norwegian province <strong>and</strong> therefore under <strong>Danish</strong> administration.<br />

<strong>The</strong> main source of information for the fishery is the Sound Toll Tables which are<br />

registers of ships entering the <strong>Danish</strong> Sound <strong>and</strong> paying a due according to the nationality of<br />

the owner of goods on board. As <strong>Danish</strong>, Norwegian, Lübeck <strong>and</strong> indeed for most of the time<br />

Swedish ships were exempt from the tax the records are less than perfect. However, they do<br />

provide us with minimum figures of the transit trade <strong>and</strong> treated cautiously may provide us<br />

with important information. <strong>The</strong> source is available annually from 1557 <strong>and</strong> Figure 8


summarises the information of ships carrying herring through the Sound.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dutch exports to the Baltic cl<strong>early</strong> dominated the picture in the 1560s but when<br />

the Dutch-Spanish Wars broke out, Dutch exports were almost terminated for twenty years.<br />

This coincided with the rise of the Bohuslen fishery which is reported to have begun in 1556.<br />

Most of the Bohuslen trade was carried out by <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>and</strong> Norwegian ships so the cargoes<br />

went untaxed <strong>and</strong> therefore mostly unregistered through the Sound, although the very fact of<br />

the passage of a toll-exempt ship was very often registered. Consequently the nominal<br />

stowage of herring from Bohuslen shows as a very modest row of columns in the graph.<br />

However, in 1585 the customs officers seem to have been instructed to make full inventories<br />

of all toll-exempt ships. For a few years we therefore get a much fuller picture of the cargoes<br />

passing through. This information can be used to make a retrospective calculation of the<br />

stowage of herring on board the ships that had been registered as passing. <strong>The</strong> calculated<br />

stowage of herring from Bohuslen is presented in the graph as a line which shows a rapid<br />

growth in the <strong>early</strong> 1560s to a level of 1,000 lasts or 12,000 barrels of herring. In the 1570s<br />

when the Dutch virtually ceased their exports, the Bohus trade quickly built up to a level of


around 50,000 barrels, peaking at 60,000 barrels in 1586. <strong>The</strong> trade then rapidly declined <strong>and</strong><br />

virtually ceased by 1589, although a couple of years in the 1590s did see herring coming from<br />

Bohuslen. <strong>The</strong> Dutch had a superior product <strong>and</strong> the Bohuslen fish merchants were no match<br />

to them.<br />

<strong>The</strong> appearance <strong>and</strong> ultimate disappearance of the Bohuslen herring was probably<br />

caused by the natural periodicity of the stock, which seems to have been linked with the North<br />

Atlantic Oscillation. 5 However, the background importance of the disappearance of the Dutch<br />

on the market <strong>and</strong> their reappearance in the 1590s cannot be neglected when considering the<br />

scale <strong>and</strong> duration of the Bohuslen fishery. While the beginning of the fishery was slow <strong>and</strong><br />

conceivably reflected increased abundance, the collapse of the fishery <strong>and</strong> the lingering<br />

presence of catches in the 1590s indicates the force of suddenly changed market<br />

circumstances. By analogy to the Aalborg evidence of the Baltic <strong>and</strong> Norway markets, the<br />

Bohuslen fishery may have continued to a degree in spite of the loss of the Baltic market as<br />

reflected in the Sound Toll Records. A combination of natural <strong>and</strong> economic causes seem to<br />

have contributed to the specific development of the sixteenth-century Bohuslen herring<br />

period.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Sound fishery<br />

Another background to the Bohuslen fishery was the decline of the largest <strong>Danish</strong> fishery, the<br />

Sound fishery for herring, in the second half of the sixteenth century. <strong>The</strong> exact timing of the<br />

decline is yet unknown, but signs of a crisis were recorded in 1547. An estate meeting of 1558<br />

still stipulated the free access to the herring market of the Sound as the first privilege of the<br />

nobleman. By the 1580s the herring town of Stege was in a slump due to the crisis of the<br />

5Brian R. MacKenzie (1), Jürgen Alheit (2), Daniel J. Conley (3), Poul Holm (4), Carl<br />

Christian Kinze, Ecological Hypotheses for a Historical Reconstruction of Upper Trophic<br />

Level Biomass in the Baltic Sea. Canadian Journal of Fisheries <strong>and</strong> Aquaculture Science


herring market, <strong>and</strong> by the <strong>early</strong> seventeenth century the King was able to doubt if German<br />

merchants were still making the y<strong>early</strong> appearance on the herring market which was necessary<br />

if they wanted to keep their privileges.<br />

This was a dramatic downturn to a fishery which for a couple of centuries had been<br />

the main export commodity of Denmark. <strong>The</strong> trade was in the h<strong>and</strong>s of German merchants but<br />

the fishery was mainly conducted by Danes. Unfortunately, the estate records cannot be used<br />

to reveal the size of the fishery as the German traders were exempt from the <strong>Danish</strong><br />

authorities. However, there is evidence to indicate the size of the fishery around 1400 which<br />

has been estimated by Christensen to have amounted to a total export of 2-300,000 barrels of<br />

herring. <strong>The</strong> catches were taken not only in the Sound proper but extended into the Baltic to<br />

the isl<strong>and</strong> of Bornholm. We may relate the estimated catches to <strong>modern</strong> records. A st<strong>and</strong>ard<br />

Rostock barrel of herring weighed 117 kg including the brine. As one barrel of salt was<br />

needed for three barrels of gutted herring, 6 the net herring content was approximately 100 kg<br />

wet fish. <strong>The</strong> peak medieval export thus corresponded roughly to a catch of 30,000 tons. In<br />

addition the fishermen kept some fish for their consumption <strong>and</strong> sale. <strong>The</strong>re is reason to<br />

estimate this portion at another 100,000 barrels, 7 bringing the medieval Sound fishery to a<br />

total of around 40,000 tonnes. Around 1900, before the introduction of motor boats <strong>and</strong> the<br />

trawl, catches in the <strong>Danish</strong> part of the Sound were around 8-9,000 tonnes per year. 8 Catches<br />

(submitted).<br />

6 Kulturhistorisk Leksikon 4, 343-46. DD 4:1 nr 128.<br />

7 According to the Modbog, the judicial code for the Scanian fish market, no fisherman<br />

was allowed to salt more than six barrels of herring to his own need, while the remaining<br />

catch should be sold fresh to the merchants. With an estimated total number of fishermen<br />

around 1400 of 17,000 men, we should add about 100.000 barrels for private consumption,<br />

making an estimated peak catch of 400,000 barrels.<br />

8 Fiskeriberetning 1894-95, 1904-05 (København, 1895, 1905), Districts: Nordsjæll<strong>and</strong>,<br />

Sydsjæll<strong>and</strong>, Øresund, Loll<strong>and</strong>, Bornholm. In 1904 64,451,600 herrings were caught. If the<br />

average weight is estimated at 150 g this corresponded to 9,668 tonnes. See further L. G.<br />

Sjöstedt, Barsebäcks fiskeläge (Malmö, 1951) 87 for some practical experiments<br />

demonstrating the size <strong>and</strong> weight of the medieval herring.


on the Swedish side were probably larger, <strong>and</strong> we may therefore estimate a total catch in<br />

<strong>modern</strong> times around 20,000 tonnes. <strong>The</strong> strong medieval fishery was carried out in thous<strong>and</strong>s<br />

of small boats which operated driftnets at night during two-three hectic months in the autumn.<br />

A very rough calculation indicates that the total number of fishermen employed in the fishery<br />

around 1400 may have been around 17,000 men with an additional 8,000 employed in related<br />

trades.<br />

Catches varied from year to year, <strong>and</strong> the herring almost disappeared in some years<br />

such as 1402, 1425, 1469, 1474-5. In 1494 the <strong>Danish</strong> herring exports (including the<br />

Limfjord) probably amounted to only 100,000 barrels, <strong>and</strong> the total number of fishermen had<br />

declined to around 6,000 men. In the 1520s, the Sound <strong>fisheries</strong> experienced their last period<br />

of greatness. According to the bailiff of Lübeck no fewer than 7,515 vessels with an average<br />

crew of five men, or 37,500 fishers, paid a due to sign up for the fishery. Every fisherman had<br />

to pay 240 herrings to the king, <strong>and</strong> the total revenue is stated to have been 7,703 barrels of<br />

herring. 9 A typical barrel contained 840 herring, <strong>and</strong> we may therefore calculate that the total<br />

number of fishermen was somewhat lower than the estimate above but still a staggering<br />

26,960 men. Unfortunately, we do not know the total catches of the year but there can be no<br />

doubt that several hundred thous<strong>and</strong> barrels were produced. When in 1537 we do know the<br />

total export, the Sound herring fishery was already declining. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Danish</strong> customs officer at<br />

Falsterbo reported a catch of 96,000 barrels from this place, while total <strong>Danish</strong> herring<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> – from the other fishing ports at the Sound <strong>and</strong> Bornholm <strong>and</strong> the Limfjord –<br />

according to his <strong>and</strong> his colleagues’ judgement amounted to around 360,000 barrels. 10 <strong>The</strong><br />

Falsterbo figure compares favourably but not overwhelmingly so with the low catch of 60,000<br />

9 Danske Magazin VI 1836.<br />

10 Schäfer, Das Buch.., bilag V. See also Mikael Venge, Fra åretold til toldetat. Dansk<br />

Toldhistorie I (Viborg, 1987) 72-76.


arrels in 1494. 11<br />

To conclude, the Sound fishery seems to have experienced two extraordinary peaks<br />

around 1400 <strong>and</strong> again in the 1520s. <strong>The</strong> value of the catches did not compare, however,<br />

because of the long-term price inflation of agricultural products as compared to marine<br />

products. From 1450 to 1550 the price of herring was halved relative to grain. 12 Nevertheless,<br />

the value of the fishery attracted the <strong>Danish</strong> nobility to invest considerably in the <strong>fisheries</strong> in<br />

the first half of the sixteenth century. 13 <strong>The</strong>y contributed capital <strong>and</strong> labour from their estates,<br />

<strong>and</strong> the Sound fishery atttracted crews from all of south Seal<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> even from Jutl<strong>and</strong>. 14 In<br />

the herring period the most active towns were reported to have been almost deserted by<br />

contemporary<br />

accounts. 15 No<br />

wonder then if the<br />

decline of the Sound<br />

fishery sometime in<br />

the middle of the<br />

century will have<br />

caused many<br />

fishermen to migrate<br />

11 Schäfer, Das Buch... 126-7. On repression of the Germans see Danske<br />

Kancelliregistranter 1535-1550, udg. Kr. Erslev & W. Mollerup (København, 1881-82) 1536<br />

Malmøs reces 6. april.<br />

12 W. Bauernfeind, Materielle Grundstrukturen im Spätmittelalter und der Frühen Neuzeit:<br />

Preisentwicklung und Agrarkonjunktur am Nürnberger Getreidemarkt von 1339 bis 1670<br />

(Neustadt / Aisch, BRD, 1993).<br />

13 Erik Arup, Danmarks Historie II (København, 1932) 417.<br />

14 Bjarne Stoklund, ‘Bonde og fisker. Lidt om det middelalderlige sildefiskeri og dets<br />

udøvere’. H<strong>and</strong>els- og Søfartsmuseets Årbog 1959, 101-22.<br />

15 Stoklund, ‘Bonde og fisker’.


in order to take up new <strong>fisheries</strong>, as indeed happened when fishermen of Elsinore regularly<br />

sailed to Bohuslen from around 1560. Others took up new <strong>fisheries</strong> which had hitherto not<br />

been utilised.<br />

Unfortunately, the estate records of the Sound area survive only from the last<br />

decades of the sixteenth century <strong>and</strong> have not yet been fully investigated. One estate account,<br />

Kronborg Len, was investigated by Søren Fr<strong>and</strong>sen <strong>and</strong> Erik A. Jarrum, <strong>and</strong> their findings are<br />

summarised in Figure 9. <strong>The</strong> tax was paid on the oar, <strong>and</strong> the returns calculated in times of 80<br />

herring (the ‘ol’) which probably was the amount paid per man. <strong>The</strong> graph therefore reflects<br />

the number of active fishermen per year. Activity was at a peak in 1585, <strong>and</strong> one is left<br />

wondering if this reflected fishermen participating in the Bohuslen fishery rather than the<br />

Sound fishery which by all qualitative evidence was already very bad at this time. <strong>The</strong><br />

number of fishermen was halved from 1585 to 1620, when from qualitative evidence we do<br />

know that the Sound fishery had a brief period of recovery. Numbers were cut again to one-<br />

third in the next twenty years. After this dramatic decline, the number of fishermen stabilised<br />

with some active years around 1700, <strong>and</strong> again in the 1740s, probably reflecting a periodicity<br />

of the herring stock.<br />

<strong>The</strong> tax list from Malmøhus county, which have been preliminarily examined for this<br />

paper, unfortunately do not include the fishing settlements along the coast of Skåne. <strong>The</strong><br />

records, which are the household account of the vassal of Malmøhus castle, nevertheless give<br />

an insight into the diversity of fishery. Tax of herring, cod, garfish, large cod, ling, whiting,<br />

ray, eel, salmon, haddock, <strong>and</strong> flounder was paid on the l<strong>and</strong>s belonging to the estate in the<br />

years 1565, 1572, 1575, 1582. This diversity is not found in the seventeenth century. In the<br />

accounts of Malmøhus from the years 1624, 1625 <strong>and</strong> 1626 the list of paid fish has been<br />

shortened to only include herring, cod <strong>and</strong> eel.<br />

A study of the estate records of the isl<strong>and</strong> of Møn confirmed the picture of a dramatic


decline in the second half of the sixteenth century. In the 1540s eleven fishing villages were in<br />

existence on Møn according to the tax lists, while the tax collectors only listed four in the<br />

1620s, including one which had been deserted. Two <strong>early</strong> fragmentary lists give evidence of<br />

considerable tax revenue of herring while later <strong>and</strong> more complete evidence from the <strong>early</strong><br />

seventeenth century reveal only very limited revenues from the fishery. <strong>The</strong> herring fishery<br />

seems to have become very marginal, while the evidence indicates a shortlived surge in the<br />

cod fishery in the 1620s. 16<br />

<strong>The</strong> rise of the cod <strong>fisheries</strong> of Southern Denmark<br />

<strong>The</strong> Nordic Seven Years War 1563-70 caused the navy to solicit food from every corner of<br />

the Kingdom. White fish, especially cod, was eminently suited for navy purposes. Already in<br />

October 1563, the King sent letters to buy salted cod for the navy from the isl<strong>and</strong>s of Anholt,<br />

Langel<strong>and</strong>, Møen, Bornholm <strong>and</strong> Kullen, <strong>and</strong> from the towns of Skagen <strong>and</strong> Simrishavn. 17 By<br />

the end of the year, the King ordered his men in Jutl<strong>and</strong> to buy cod <strong>and</strong> ask for stock lists<br />

from all merchants to prevent them from exporting the fish. 18 Herring could be sold at good<br />

prices abroad, <strong>and</strong> was therefore exempt from export bans, while cod was mainly caught for<br />

the domestic <strong>and</strong> north German market <strong>and</strong> could therefore be reserved for the navy without<br />

heavy financial loss. 19 <strong>The</strong> craze for cod meant that the sources suddenly document a cod<br />

fishery previously unknown to us. Some of the fishery may have been stimulated by the new<br />

dem<strong>and</strong>, but the basic catch structure must have existed before. Such is for instance the case<br />

with the fishermen on the isl<strong>and</strong> of Møn by the Sound, who had a long history in the herring<br />

16 Jacob Svane Hansen, Fiskeri på Møn i første halvdel af 1600-tallet. Belyst gennem<br />

Stegehus Lens regnskaber. Unpublished BA thesis, Aarhus University, 2000.<br />

17 Kanc Brev 1561-65, 16 October 1563.<br />

18 Kanc Brev 1561-65, 28 December 1563.<br />

19 Kanc Brev 1561-65, 5/4 1563; 9/8 1563; 16/10; 14/1 1564; Regesta Diplomatica<br />

historiæ danicæ II,2:1, 1564, 20. Martii, *4725; Kanc Brev 1561-65 3/9 1564.


fishery. In <strong>early</strong> March 1564 they were catching cod in the Sound. 20 Archaeology<br />

demonstrates that relatively new fishing settlements boomed as a result of this dem<strong>and</strong>, <strong>and</strong><br />

long lining spread throughout the country. 21 A full investigation of the estate records will not<br />

only permit us to detail this picture but also to gain a fuller insight into the interplay between<br />

the cod <strong>and</strong> the herring fishery which so far dominates our underst<strong>and</strong>ing of the development<br />

of the <strong>Danish</strong> medieval <strong>and</strong> <strong>early</strong> <strong>modern</strong> fishery.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Bornholm Fishery<br />

On the Baltic isl<strong>and</strong> of Bornholm, the annual tax lists of the crown’s estate are preserved from<br />

1597 until 1660 except for a few years, <strong>and</strong> in most years herring <strong>and</strong> cod fishermen are<br />

noted. From 1597 to 1612 the tax records are quite detailed, <strong>and</strong> it is not only possible to add<br />

up the amount of paid fish but also to establish the size of the contribution from the various<br />

sites along the entire Bornholm coastline. According to the accounts every man had to pay 50-<br />

100 tax-herring to participate in the herring fishery. An appendix to the tax list of 1607 says<br />

that 105 people payed tax herring (told-sild), salted herring in barrels, that year. <strong>The</strong> cod<br />

fishery was equally taxed by persons as tax cod (told-torsk) in the form of dried cod. After<br />

1609 the payment of both herring <strong>and</strong> cod was made salted <strong>and</strong> barrelled. It was no longer a<br />

tax by persons but a constant duty on the rent of farms near the coast. However, the fact that<br />

the peasants were relieved from paying the duty in poor years allows us to use it as a rough<br />

indicator of the fishing effort.<br />

20 Kanc Brev 1561-65, 13/3 1564.<br />

21 Kulturhistorisk Leksikon, vide Krogfiskeri; S. Fr<strong>and</strong>sen, De nordsjæll<strong>and</strong>ske fiskerlejer.<br />

Bygd 1987, 2-6. Berg, H., Bender Jørgensen, L. og Mortensøn, O., S<strong>and</strong>hagen. Et<br />

langel<strong>and</strong>sk fiskerleje fra renaissancen (Rudkøbing 1981).


<strong>The</strong> tax list of the crown from the seventeenth century gives an impression of the<br />

periodic nature of the fishery (Figure 10 <strong>and</strong> 11). At the end of the sixteenth century the<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> of both cod <strong>and</strong> herring were rich but after this time both declined significantly.<br />

During a 10-year period the tax-herring payment was more than halved. Thus, in 1597 18<br />

barrels of salted herring was paid by the isl<strong>and</strong>, while in 1607 the payment was only 7 barrels.<br />

In the following years the herring fishery stabilised on an even lower level, until a new peak<br />

in 1615. In the following years no income from the fishery is found in the tax records. In 1627<br />

herring was again paid from the fishery on Bornholm <strong>and</strong> in the years up to 1644 the fishery<br />

appears to have been stable. <strong>The</strong> records do not mention herring after this year.<br />

<strong>The</strong> cod fishery shows a periodicity on a somewhat longer wavelength. <strong>The</strong> payment<br />

of tax-cod indicates a peak in the fishery at the end of the sixteenth century after which the<br />

fishery declined, <strong>and</strong> in the years from 1616 to 1627 the cod disappeared from the tax lists.<br />

From the beginning of the 1630s the fishery came to another period of growth, building up to<br />

a new peak in 1655.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Blekinge fishery<br />

<strong>The</strong> fishery of Blekinge did not experience the same periodicity as seen on Bornholm<br />

but was characterized by decline <strong>and</strong> stagnation throughout the first half of the seventeenth<br />

century. <strong>The</strong> tax lists of the crown from Kristianopel indicate a continued decline in the<br />

extraction of marine resources in the Blekinge fishery during the seventeenth century.<br />

Kristianopel county of the region of Blekinge, which is the easternmost region of ancient<br />

Denmark <strong>and</strong> present-day southeast Sweden, was the centre of important cod <strong>and</strong> salmon<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> (Figures 12 <strong>and</strong> 13). In the tax lists of the crown preserved from the year 1604 until<br />

1659 dried cod (‘spidfisk’) was the most important payment of the <strong>fisheries</strong>. Additionally, tax<br />

was also paid on barrels of salted cod, salmon <strong>and</strong> eel, while the herring fishery evidently was


not taxed. <strong>The</strong> accounts from 1604 to 1613 are detailed <strong>and</strong> show that the gravitational point<br />

of the <strong>fisheries</strong> was in Øster herred in the southeastern tip of the county. In 1609 Øster herred<br />

delivered 76% of the total revenue of 30,474 dried cod. <strong>The</strong> fishermen were taxed both<br />

directly <strong>and</strong> indirectly through the crown rent of the farm (jordebogsafgiften). <strong>The</strong> rent of the<br />

farm was fixed over a period of years. After 1613 the crown revenue came only from the rent<br />

barrels<br />

50000<br />

40000<br />

30000<br />

20000<br />

10000<br />

200<br />

150<br />

100<br />

50<br />

Tax on fishing efforts<br />

Kristianopel county<br />

0<br />

1604 1609 1614 1619 1624 1629 1634 1639 1644 1649 1654<br />

year<br />

Cod, dried<br />

Tax on fishing efforts<br />

Kristianopel county<br />

0<br />

1604 1614 1624 1634 1644 1654<br />

1609 1619 1629<br />

year<br />

1639 1649<br />

Salmon Eel, dried <strong>and</strong> salted<br />

Cod, salted<br />

of the farm.


<strong>The</strong> duty on the cod fishery was reduced by 75 %, the salmon fishery almost ceased to exist,<br />

<strong>and</strong> the eel fishery declined as well. <strong>The</strong> peak of the cod fishery lay in the beginning of the<br />

century when 42,364 dried cod was paid to the king in 1608. This year was also a good year<br />

in the salmon fishery with a total tax income of 110½ barrels of salmon. <strong>The</strong> previous year the<br />

salmon fishery had been even better with a total revenue of 160 barrels of salmon. Yet in<br />

1609 it came to an end, <strong>and</strong> the income from the salmon fishery disappeared from the<br />

accounts. <strong>The</strong> cod fishery was also in decline but stabilised in 1613 on a lower lever, <strong>and</strong> until<br />

1630 the annual duty amounted to approx. 25,000 dried cod. Samples of the accounts from the<br />

years 1634, 1639, 1640, 1641, 1644, 1649, 1654 show that the cod fishery declined even<br />

further by 1634 to stabilise on a low level with a duty of 10,600 dried cod. <strong>The</strong> decline in the<br />

cod fishery is primarily evident as a decline in the number of dried cod paid to the crown, but<br />

the revenue of barrels of salted cod was also reduced from 11 barrels in 1609 to 8 barrels in<br />

1610, <strong>and</strong> in1613 the payment had become as low as 3 barrels annually. <strong>The</strong> payment of eel<br />

was not equally reduced, yet the income from this fishery also diminished from the beginning<br />

of the seventeenth century <strong>and</strong> stabilised around 1613 at an annual income of 13-15 barrels.<br />

<strong>The</strong> decline of the <strong>fisheries</strong> in the eighteenth century<br />

<strong>The</strong> decline of the <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> in the later seventeenth <strong>and</strong> eighteenth centuries was<br />

evident also to contemporaries. By the last quarter of the eighteenth century <strong>Danish</strong> writers<br />

much deplored the state of the <strong>Danish</strong> herring <strong>fisheries</strong>. <strong>The</strong>y could only watch with envy as<br />

the herring <strong>fisheries</strong> of Bohuslän experienced an unprecedented boom., <strong>and</strong> the recurrent<br />

theme was for the Aalborg fishery to once again rise to compete. <strong>The</strong> other <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> of<br />

the period, however, hardly receive mention <strong>and</strong> seem to have been ignored by most<br />

commentators for their impoverished state. <strong>The</strong> once thriving fishing town of Skagen reached<br />

its low water mark with a much reduced population living in stark poverty. <strong>The</strong> West Jutl<strong>and</strong>


<strong>fisheries</strong> exported little to Hamburg <strong>and</strong> North Germany, <strong>and</strong> the catches were mainly<br />

bartered for agricultural produce with the hinterl<strong>and</strong>. 22 Fisheries in North Zeal<strong>and</strong> were not<br />

much better; the fishermen complained bitterly of Swedish competition when the Bohuslän<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> began, <strong>and</strong> certainly the number of boats in Gilleleje declined from eighteen to seven<br />

between 1760 <strong>and</strong> 1785.<br />

<strong>The</strong> decline of the <strong>fisheries</strong> was reflected in a drain of fishermen to other trades,<br />

mainly the merchant <strong>and</strong> naval marines.While tens of thous<strong>and</strong>s were involved in the late<br />

medieval <strong>fisheries</strong>, the total number was only around 5,000 people in 1770 when the total<br />

population had increased by as much as 50%. <strong>The</strong> latter half of the eighteenth century was a<br />

time when mercantile shipping flourished, <strong>and</strong> new jobs opened up for the able-bodied<br />

seaman in world-wide trades. 23 Commentators remarked that while the <strong>fisheries</strong> provided the<br />

sailors for the growing merchant marine, the <strong>fisheries</strong> were a shrinking business. By all<br />

counts, marine catches were at an all time low around <strong>1800.</strong><br />

Causes for the Decline<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is no single explanation for the contraction of <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> in the latter half of the<br />

sixteenth <strong>and</strong> <strong>early</strong> part of the seventeenth century. Rather we should look for a combination<br />

of factors, for both acute <strong>and</strong> chronic causes, environmental as well as economic forces. We<br />

should also distinguish between rhythmic variation <strong>and</strong> irreversible decline when discussing<br />

the long-term trends in the <strong>fisheries</strong>.<br />

- Prices<br />

<strong>The</strong> obvious backdrop to declining effort is dwindling returns on one’s labour. Unfortunately,<br />

22 Holm, Hjerting. En maritim l<strong>and</strong>sby midt i verden, 1550-1930 (Esbjerg, 1992).<br />

23 Poul Holm, Kystens erhverv og bebyggelse, 1500-2000. Bidrag til Kulturhistorisk<br />

bygdeinddeling af Danmark. Aktører i l<strong>and</strong>skabet, ed. Per Grau Møller, Poul Holm & Linda<br />

Rasmussen (Odense, 2000).


we do not have a price series of <strong>Danish</strong> fish that is immediately relevant to our problem. We<br />

know that after a peak around 1450, fish prices fell through the sixteenth century relative to<br />

agricultural prices. Arnved Nedkvitne has published three series of data relating the<br />

purchasing power of dried cod to grain on the Dutch, English <strong>and</strong> Norwegian markets, which<br />

throw light on the decline. 24 Whereas one kilogramme of dried fish would have bought<br />

fourteen kg of wheat on the London market around 1400, at the end of the sixteenth century it<br />

bought only six kg. Similar evidence from Holl<strong>and</strong> shows that dried cod lost almost half its<br />

purchasing power relative to rye during the sixteenth century, <strong>and</strong> on the Bergen market the<br />

purchasing power was more than halved between 1400 <strong>and</strong> 1500 <strong>and</strong> halved again in the next<br />

hundred years. A similar development concerning herring may be calculated from the German<br />

evidence presented by Bauernfeind; between 1450 <strong>and</strong> 1550 herring lost half of its value<br />

relative to rye at the Nuremburg market, <strong>and</strong> continued declining in the seventeenth century,<br />

except for some very good years around 1617-22. 25 Evidence from the neighbouring North<br />

European countries concerning both cod <strong>and</strong> herring thus shows a significant drop in the price<br />

of fish relative to agricultural products from the late medieval to the <strong>early</strong> <strong>modern</strong> ages. In the<br />

Netherl<strong>and</strong>s, the relative price fall was counterbalanced by exp<strong>and</strong>ing deep-sea catches by<br />

larger <strong>and</strong> more productive ships. In Denmark, fishermen were apparently unable to afford<br />

larger ships <strong>and</strong> were pushed out of the fishing sector by poor prices.<br />

<strong>The</strong> adverse trend of fish prices relative to agricultural prices continued through the<br />

eighteenth century. <strong>The</strong> price series from the Copenhagen fish market below shows that<br />

herring became cheaper as compared to the price of bread, thus worsening the purchasing<br />

power of fishermen relative to peasants. <strong>The</strong> spring herring came from the Limfiord, while the<br />

autumn herring most probably came from the Sound <strong>and</strong> North Zeal<strong>and</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong>. <strong>The</strong> only<br />

24 Arnved Nedkvitne, “Mens Bønderne seilte og Jægterne for.” Nordnorsk og vestnorsk<br />

kystøkonomi 1500-1730 (Oslo, 1988).


notable exception to the price decline occurred in the 1740s when the fishermen must have<br />

experienced a time of rare <strong>and</strong> welcome prosperity. We find reminiscences of the good times<br />

in the reports to chancellor Oeder some thirty years later, which generally lament the present<br />

<strong>and</strong> long for the good old days; they also specifically record data which seem to corroborate a<br />

decline within the past generation. Only in the last decade of the century did fishermen<br />

experience some progress in purchasing power relative to bread prices.<br />

Prices <strong>and</strong> Price Relations, Herring <strong>and</strong> Bread.<br />

Copenhagen, 1721-<strong>1800.</strong> Skilling per skippund<br />

bread autumn<br />

herring<br />

fish/bread<br />

ratio<br />

spring<br />

herring<br />

fish/bread<br />

-ratio<br />

1721-30 260 568 218 320 123<br />

1731-40 272 554 204 301 110<br />

1741-50 148 638 432 374 253<br />

1751-60 251 530 210 261 104<br />

1761-70 234 554 237 301 129<br />

1771-80 413 570 138 294 71<br />

1781-90 615 672 109 377 61<br />

1791-1800 401 713 177 462 115<br />

Source: Calculations based on tables by Friis & Glamann, A History of Prices.<br />

- Capital<br />

In the latter part of the sixteenth century, the noblemen withdrew their maritime investments<br />

25 Bauernfeind, Materielle Grundstrukturen.


to concentrate on agriculture <strong>and</strong> stockraising. 26 As late as 1558, when the Båhus <strong>fisheries</strong><br />

were growing, the right of the nobility to participate toll-free in any herring fishery throughout<br />

the country was promulgated by the estate assembly. 27 Later this freedom became of no<br />

importance, <strong>and</strong> the nobillity began a political battle to restrict the freedom of their peasants<br />

to fish <strong>and</strong> trade; while the King occasionally supported the freedom of the peasants to leave<br />

their soil, the towns supported the noblemen. In South Zeal<strong>and</strong>, the towns suffered because of<br />

the decline in the fish trade. <strong>The</strong> towns wanted to reduce peasant sailing in order to keep the<br />

transport of goods for themselves. <strong>The</strong> combined efforts of nobles <strong>and</strong> towns succeeded by a<br />

series of royal comm<strong>and</strong>s. 28 <strong>The</strong> prohibitions meant, however, that the peasants lost interest in<br />

keeping a boat altogether; they not only stopped trading but also fishing. Before 1600 they<br />

had been effectively bound to the l<strong>and</strong>, <strong>and</strong> a strictly agricultural system had developed. <strong>The</strong><br />

late-sixteenth century development of domain manors needed manpower, <strong>and</strong> could not<br />

tolerate a haphazard loss of the workforce for two or three months in the harvesting period. If,<br />

or when, the herring returned in great numbers, there was only a small group of professional<br />

fishermen to catch it. <strong>The</strong> custom of recruiting crews from the surrounding agricultural areas<br />

had stopped, <strong>and</strong> economic interest had turned effectively away from the sea. One might<br />

expect that the large-scale medieval fishery would have left a lasting heritage in spite of the<br />

sixteenth-century contraction. But, on the contrary, southeast Denmark was described in the<br />

eighteenth century as a region where the peasant would only use the l<strong>and</strong> in spite of being so<br />

near to the sea. Net fishing may have dem<strong>and</strong>ed many h<strong>and</strong>s, but only few skilled fishermen.<br />

When money deserted the fishing industry, fishing was completely given up, while the<br />

professional fishermen concentrated on the few fishing villages in the vicinity of the big<br />

26 Ladewig Petersen, Danmarks historie 2:2, 409.<br />

27 CDD I.<br />

28 F. Martensen-Larsen, Hav, fjord og h<strong>and</strong>el. En studie i h<strong>and</strong>elsveje i Nordjyll<strong>and</strong> i tiden<br />

indtil 1850 (Herning, 1986) 151 note 10.


towns like Copenhagen, Malmø <strong>and</strong> Helsingør where they would still find a local market for<br />

their products. 29<br />

- Consumption<br />

Many factors may explain the relative price decline. After the Protestant reformation,<br />

‘catholic practices’ such as the eating of fish at stipulated times were given up. When fasting<br />

regulations were abolished, the wealthy turned to a meat diet even on traditional ‘fish days’.<br />

North West European consumption habits gave greater priority to meat <strong>and</strong> poultry; declining<br />

fish consumption was evident in Britain <strong>and</strong> the Sc<strong>and</strong>inavian countries by the seventeenth<br />

century. This is a general factor which helps to explain the development of North Atlantic<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong>. Of course, dem<strong>and</strong> remained for the provision of cheap protein for the labouring<br />

poor, especially the exp<strong>and</strong>ing numbers of seafarers who needed nutritious <strong>and</strong> well-<br />

preserved food for long voyages, but the dem<strong>and</strong> for well-preserved, high-quality fish<br />

contracted. 30<br />

Unfortunately, practically no work has been done on <strong>Danish</strong> food consumption<br />

patterns in the sixteenth <strong>and</strong> seventeenth centuries; the change in diet probably did not follow<br />

immediately upon the Reformation but rather occurred during the first half of the seventeenth<br />

century. 31 Fish consumption in rural areas probably changed more slowly than in the towns<br />

<strong>and</strong> among the nobility. By the middle of the eighteenth century, the y<strong>early</strong> ration of herring<br />

for a Zeal<strong>and</strong> agricultural worker was reckoned as one quarter of a barrel; 32 this ration need<br />

not have changed much since the Middle Ages.<br />

29 Stoklund 1959, 119.<br />

30 Heckscher; Cutting; Grøn.<br />

31 Lilli Friis, ‘Æde og drikke’, 419-23. <strong>The</strong>re is a rich source material in estate food lists.<br />

32 Heckscher 1949, xxv (note referring to p. 285).


- Competition<br />

<strong>The</strong> fact that <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> crumbled while the Dutch succeeded reminds us that the Danes<br />

concentrated on inshore, lightly salted products (<strong>and</strong> in the case of the Sound for the top end<br />

of the market), while the Dutch went deep-sea for large quantities of heavily-salted fish. <strong>The</strong><br />

superiority of the Dutch made them corner the remaining up-market for high-quality herring.<br />

<strong>The</strong> result of Dutch dominance was the ab<strong>and</strong>onment of the <strong>Danish</strong>-Norwegian coasts by<br />

people in their thous<strong>and</strong>s. After a brief pause during the Spanish War, when Bohuslen had its<br />

hey-days, the Dutch returned around 1590 to supply the Baltic market, <strong>and</strong> in the face of their<br />

plentiful, high-quality supplies, the <strong>Danish</strong>-Norwegian fishing industry succumbed. Dutch<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> peaked in the first half of the seventeenth century when 5-600 busses, each of 50 to<br />

60 tons burthen, worked with a total labour force of 7,000 fishermen, brought home a total of<br />

20,000 lasts or 240,000 barrels per year. 33 One of the reasons for the success of the Dutch was<br />

their much higher productivity. <strong>The</strong> average catch per fisherman was 34 barrels, compared<br />

with a catch per fisherman in the Sound fishery of around 15 barrels. Around 1590 the Dutch<br />

had regained control over the fishing grounds in the North Sea, <strong>and</strong> the clearances of Dutch<br />

herring through the Sound rose to unprecedented heights of almost 10,000 lasts by the end of<br />

the decade. This supply may have forced prices down <strong>and</strong> rendered the South Sc<strong>and</strong>inavian<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong> unable to compete on the market. Vastly increased Dutch cod <strong>fisheries</strong> may also<br />

have affected the South Sc<strong>and</strong>inavian <strong>fisheries</strong> adversely.<br />

- Environment<br />

Short-term environmental changes undoubtedly played a decisive role for the depression of<br />

the Limfjord fishery around 1630 <strong>and</strong> irreversibly around 1830. <strong>The</strong> barrier between the fiord<br />

33 See Jaap Bruijn in Studia Atlantica 1. Also Jan de Vries & Ad van der Woude,<br />

Nederl<strong>and</strong> 1500-1815. De eerste ronde van <strong>modern</strong>e economische groei (Amsterdam, 1995)<br />

301-2.


<strong>and</strong> the North Sea in the west was breached by a flood in 1624 <strong>and</strong> 1825. We know that the<br />

fish catches went up in the years immediately after the second breach, <strong>and</strong> that may also have<br />

happened in the 1620s. However, by 1630 <strong>and</strong> 1832 the <strong>fisheries</strong> were reported to be much<br />

depressed. <strong>The</strong> herring, which was accustomed to brackish water, was probably severely<br />

reduced with the intrusion of salt water. In the 1630s, the dune barrier was built up by the<br />

natural s<strong>and</strong> drift along the North Sea coast, <strong>and</strong> the herring stock regained strength. 34 <strong>The</strong><br />

process would perhaps have repeated itself in the nineteenth century had it not been for<br />

dredging <strong>and</strong> coastal works to keep the fiord open. <strong>The</strong> decadal cycle of the fishery which<br />

may be detected from the 1670-1750 series may also wholly be explained as a biological<br />

pattern, while the depression of the Limfjord fishery in the late eighteenth century may partly<br />

be explained as an economic result of overwhelming Bohuslen exports in the 1760s, but we<br />

should note the long-term decline which had begun already by the 1730s.<br />

<strong>The</strong> periodicity of the Bohuslen herring implies that environmental forcing was the<br />

major underlying factor, while it has been argued above that the sudden cessation of the<br />

fishery in 1590 was have been linked to market factors. <strong>The</strong> alternating cycles of North<br />

European pelagic stocks seem to be correllated to the North Atlantic Oscillation, <strong>and</strong> the<br />

historical data for the Bohuslen herring stock is one of the best examples of this correllation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> most probable explanation, which parallels the experience from the nineteenth-century<br />

herring fishery on the same resource, 35 is that the herring shoals preferred spawning grounds<br />

outside the reach of the inshore fishermen. If, because of a change in salt concentration,<br />

spawning suddenly took place in the middle of the Skagerrak rather than in the sheltered<br />

archipelago of Bohuslen, the shorebound <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>and</strong> Norwegian fishermen may have found it<br />

impossible to catch the herring. In order to go deep-sea fishing they would have needed<br />

34 Danske Magazin 3:4, 329-332.<br />

35 See Holm, Kystfolk, chapter 7.


herring drifters of the Dutch buisen type. We do not know if <strong>and</strong> to what extent <strong>Danish</strong><br />

fishermen had vessels of this kind, but the indication is that they did not, perhaps for lack of<br />

capital <strong>and</strong> technological, including shipbuilding, skills. Thus, Dutch fishermen were able to<br />

pursue a herring fishery in the Skagerrak which the <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>and</strong> Norwegian fishermen were<br />

not.<br />

It is not clear when <strong>and</strong> by how much the herring catches were reduced in the Sound,<br />

but it seems likely that the fishery was declining by the middle of the sixteenth century. <strong>The</strong><br />

decline does not seem to have occurred overnight, but rather to have been an extended<br />

process. An irreversible decline after 1600 is well-documented but we need a careful<br />

evaluation of all estate records <strong>and</strong> other circumstantial evidence to be able to follow the<br />

development in more detail. <strong>The</strong> herring in the Sound never disappeared completely as is<br />

sometimes stated.<br />

Whereas herring is a notoriously volatile resource, cod <strong>and</strong> haddock are relatively<br />

stable. Nevertheless, by the turn of the century, the West Jutl<strong>and</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> were also in serious<br />

decline <strong>and</strong> remained at a low level after 1620. <strong>The</strong> decline was not abrupt but in the long<br />

term the decline seems to have begun in the second half of the sixteenth century; tax revenues<br />

were halved between 1562/3 <strong>and</strong> c1600, <strong>and</strong> cut to one third again by 1630. For the time<br />

being, a number of hypotheses may be put forward to explain the long-term decline but we<br />

need detailed research on the microlevel which the records allow before we can hope to put<br />

the explanations to a test.<br />

<strong>The</strong> continuing depression of the <strong>Danish</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> indicates that long-term factors at<br />

the macro-level were at play in addition to sudden <strong>and</strong> abrupt changes of environment at the<br />

micro-level. <strong>The</strong> North Atlantic Oscillation is one such macro-explanation, <strong>and</strong> others are<br />

available. <strong>The</strong> cool <strong>and</strong> stormy weather prevailing in the period 1500-1850 36 may<br />

36 <strong>The</strong> period is known as the ‘Little Ice Age’ (see Encyclopedia Britannica (1999 CD-


conceivably have altered the marine habitat <strong>and</strong> caused a long-term decline in inshore<br />

<strong>fisheries</strong>. However, there is no study to substantiate this possibility, <strong>and</strong> as the evidence<br />

st<strong>and</strong>s, there is no immediate correlation to be found. After all, the Dutch <strong>fisheries</strong> in the<br />

North Sea were thriving while the West Jutl<strong>and</strong> <strong>fisheries</strong> in the same sea were ab<strong>and</strong>oned.<br />

Human <strong>and</strong> environmental factors were at play, <strong>and</strong> marine environmental historians need to<br />

join forces with historical environmental scientists to make sense of a complicated pattern.<br />

ROM edition) for an updated discussion). <strong>The</strong> worst weather seems to have occurred in the<br />

latter part of the seventeenth century. An international climatological project will produce<br />

new evidence on these phenomena in the next few years (information from the <strong>Danish</strong><br />

Meteorological Institute).

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