Project: A Reanalysis (ModE-RA) and a medium-size AGCM ensemble (ModE-Sim) to study climate variability in the modern era (1420 to 2009) - ModE is the output of the PALAEO-RA project hosted at the Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research between 2018 to 2023, funded by the European Research Council through the H2020 program (ERC Grant PALAEO-RA 787574). The aim of PALAEO-RA was to create a monthly, 3-dimensional climate reconstruction of the past 600 years. Therefore sparse information on historical climate (including early instrumental data, documentary data, and proxy data) of that period were combined with additional physical constraints taken from a large ensemble of simulations with a state-of-the-art atmospheric general circulation model by using an offline data assimilation technique. For more information on the project, visit https://www.palaeo-ra.unibe.ch/. The project output provided here consists of two main products and an additional sensitivity experiment: • ModE-RA, the main reanalysis product, • ModE-Sim, the original AGCM ensemble prior to data assimilation. • ModE-RAclim, a version of the reanalysis product based on an alternative (experimental) covariance estimation (see experiment description for details). While ModE-RA should be the version used for regular analysis, ModE-RAclim should be more seen as a side product only to be used for sensitivity studies. Summary: ModE-Sim (short for Modern Era Simulations) is a medium-size ensemble of model simulations using the ECHAM6 atmosphere general circulation model (model version 6.3.5p2, https://mpimet.mpg.de/en/science/models/mpi-esm/echam). Its setup is based on the PMIP4 experiments, but uses a forced AGCM rather than a fully coupled model. ModE-Sim was originally designed to form the a-priori state for a climate reconstruction (Modern Era Reanalysis, ModE-RA, to be found as separate experiment within this WDC project) that uses an offline data assimilation technique to combine the output of ModE-Sim with historical climate information. However, beyond its original purpose ModE-Sim on its own can be used as a tool to study climate variability, providing a high number of posible climate states that are physically plausible under the given forcings and boundary conditions. This might include, e.g. the separation of internal variability from the response to externally forced signals, understanding of teleconnection patterns, or the study of extreme events. The ensemble uses observed/reconstructed forcings and boundary conditions, while accounting in uncertainties in these. For 1420 to 1850 we provide a 60 member ensemble grouped in three subsets. The subset 1420-3 provided in this dataset group has 20 members and uses PMIP4 radiative forcings. As ocean boundary condition 20 different realizations of SST reconstructions were used and for sea ice a climatology was computed from the years 1850-1900 from HadISST2 sea ice.