1528. Repeated inundations. Continual south winds and summer fogs in Italy. Second great epidemic petechial fever there.
1528. Destruction of the French army before Naples by a pestilential Spotted Fever.
1528. Cold spring and moist summer in France.
1528–1532. Warm winters, moist summers. Repeated failures of harvest, and great famines in that country.
1528. The Trousse-galant carries off a fourth part of the inhabitants of France in this and the following years.
1528. Wet and mild winter. Moist summer with fogs. Failure in crops, and famine in England.
1528. At the end of May: outbreak in London of the Fourth epidemic Sweating Sickness. It spreads with great malignity, and with much disturbance of social life, all over England; carries off many distinguished persons, and terminates in the winter. This year it remains confined to England, and does not return in the following year.
1528. Continual south-east winds. Great drought. Swarms of locusts and fiery meteors in the north of Germany.
1529. Earthquake in Upper Italy. Sanguineous rain at Cremona. A comet in July and August.
1529. Mild winter in Germany. The spring begins in February. Great moisture throughout the summer. General dearth in March. Disease among the porpoises in the Baltic. Unwholesomeness of the river fish in the north of Germany. Disease among birds. Languor resembling syncope in Pomerania. Frequent suicides in the March. In the middle of June a flood of rain lasting four days (torrent of St. Vitus) in the south of Germany. On the 10th of August, a universal tempest. 24th of August, and the following days great heat.