From 1688 onward, Sweden had been affected by early
frost and bad harvests. This culminated in the winter of 1695, which was described as the coldest since 1658 and the
rye did not flower before July. Because of this, the Great Famine of 1695 is also referred to as
Det stora svartåret ("The Great Black Year"). The harvest of 1696, furthermore, was reportedly so bad that each farm produced only one loaf of
rye bread. Outside of Finland, the northernmost provinces of Sweden were the most severely affected. Desperate famine victims from the countryside left for the cities in search for food, especially to the capital of Stockholm, where in the spring of 1697 the streets were reportedly strewn with corpses and people dying of starvation. During 1696–1698, the
crude death rate in northern and central Sweden was over double its normal value. In the south, the surplus from
Scania's modest harvest was sent to adjacent counties; in addition, several hundred thousand barrels of grain were imported from the Baltics.
Israel Kolmodin wrote the psalm
Den blomstertid nu kommer in 1695 in connection to the famine, intended as a prayer to God that the next summer would bring food. ==Norway==