Description

Book Synopsis
Food as a cultural symbol was as important in antiquity as in our own times and Food in Antiquity investigates some of the ways in which food and eating shaped the lives and thoughts of the indigenous peoples of the ancient Mediterranean.

Trade Review
To say that in the past there has been a chasm between classical studies as such on the one hand and food history studies on the other would be misleading ... This book from Exeter ... Provides a clear and welcome sign that the two fields are acquiring beneficial organic connections of a kind which had only rarely been glimpsed, or dreamed of, in the past.

Alan Davidson

* from the Foreword to the book *

Table of Contents
  • Foreword - Alan Davidson
  • General Introduction - John Wilkins
  • Part 1
  • The production and preparation of cereals and staples: acornutopia, Sarah Mason
  • Barley cakes and emmer bread, Thomas Braun
  • Roman bread and cereals, K.D. White
  • Byzantine porridge, Stephen Hill and Anthony Bryer
  • Ethnoarchaeology and storage in the ancient Mediterranean, Hamish Forbes and Lin Foxhall
  • Clibanus and sub testu in the Roman world, A.C. Cubberley
  • Molecular biology and ancient history, Robert Sallares
  • Part 2
  • Meat and fish: the Roman meat trade, Joan Frayn
  • The Apician sauce, Jon Solomon
  • Fish from the Black sea - classical Byzantium and the Greekness of trade, David Braund
  • The paradoxes of seafood, Nicholas Purcell
  • A pretty kettle of fish, Brian Sparkes
  • Part 3
  • The social and religious context of food and eating: cereal diet and the origins of man, Gerhard Baudy
  • Ritual eating - the case of the parasite, Louise Bruit
  • Ancient vegetarianism, Catharine Osborne
  • Attitudes to fasting women, Veronika Grimm-Samuel
  • The control of foods by sumptuary laws, Liugi Gallo
  • Revolutionary eating at Athens, James Davidson
  • Part 4
  • Foreign foods: food and frontier in the Greek colonies of Southern Italy, Mario Lombardo
  • Persian food - food stereotypes and political identity, Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg
  • Lydian food, David Harvey
  • Food and archaeology in Romano-Byzantine Palestine, Simon Dar
  • Food for Egyptian temple workers, Dorothy Thompson
  • The oldest recipes of all, Jean Bottero
  • Celtic foods, Peter Reynolds.
  • Part 5
  • Food and medicine: hippokratic diaita, Elizabeth Craik
  • Hippokratic gynaecology, Helen King
  • Galen and the traveller's fare, Vivian Nutton
  • Oribasius and medical dietetics or the three P's, Mark Grant
  • Part 6
  • Food and literature: archestratus where and when, Andrew Dalby
  • Problems in Greek gastronomic poetry - on the attic banquet of Matro, Enzo Degani
  • The sources and sauces of Athenaeus, John Wilkins and Shaun Hill
  • Comic food and food for comedy, Dwora Gilula
  • Archestratos: Where and When?, Andrew Dalby
  • Problems in Greek Gastronomic Poetry: on Matro’s Attikon Deipnon, Enzo Degani
  • The Sources and Sauces of Athenaeus, John Wilkins
  • Index of passages discussed
  • General index

Food in Antiquity Studies in Ancient Society and

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    A Hardback by John Wilkins, David Harvey, Michael J. Dobson

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      View other formats and editions of Food in Antiquity Studies in Ancient Society and by John Wilkins

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 9/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780859894180, 978-0859894180
      ISBN10: 0859894185

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Food as a cultural symbol was as important in antiquity as in our own times and Food in Antiquity investigates some of the ways in which food and eating shaped the lives and thoughts of the indigenous peoples of the ancient Mediterranean.

      Trade Review
      To say that in the past there has been a chasm between classical studies as such on the one hand and food history studies on the other would be misleading ... This book from Exeter ... Provides a clear and welcome sign that the two fields are acquiring beneficial organic connections of a kind which had only rarely been glimpsed, or dreamed of, in the past.

      Alan Davidson

      * from the Foreword to the book *

      Table of Contents
      • Foreword - Alan Davidson
      • General Introduction - John Wilkins
      • Part 1
      • The production and preparation of cereals and staples: acornutopia, Sarah Mason
      • Barley cakes and emmer bread, Thomas Braun
      • Roman bread and cereals, K.D. White
      • Byzantine porridge, Stephen Hill and Anthony Bryer
      • Ethnoarchaeology and storage in the ancient Mediterranean, Hamish Forbes and Lin Foxhall
      • Clibanus and sub testu in the Roman world, A.C. Cubberley
      • Molecular biology and ancient history, Robert Sallares
      • Part 2
      • Meat and fish: the Roman meat trade, Joan Frayn
      • The Apician sauce, Jon Solomon
      • Fish from the Black sea - classical Byzantium and the Greekness of trade, David Braund
      • The paradoxes of seafood, Nicholas Purcell
      • A pretty kettle of fish, Brian Sparkes
      • Part 3
      • The social and religious context of food and eating: cereal diet and the origins of man, Gerhard Baudy
      • Ritual eating - the case of the parasite, Louise Bruit
      • Ancient vegetarianism, Catharine Osborne
      • Attitudes to fasting women, Veronika Grimm-Samuel
      • The control of foods by sumptuary laws, Liugi Gallo
      • Revolutionary eating at Athens, James Davidson
      • Part 4
      • Foreign foods: food and frontier in the Greek colonies of Southern Italy, Mario Lombardo
      • Persian food - food stereotypes and political identity, Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg
      • Lydian food, David Harvey
      • Food and archaeology in Romano-Byzantine Palestine, Simon Dar
      • Food for Egyptian temple workers, Dorothy Thompson
      • The oldest recipes of all, Jean Bottero
      • Celtic foods, Peter Reynolds.
      • Part 5
      • Food and medicine: hippokratic diaita, Elizabeth Craik
      • Hippokratic gynaecology, Helen King
      • Galen and the traveller's fare, Vivian Nutton
      • Oribasius and medical dietetics or the three P's, Mark Grant
      • Part 6
      • Food and literature: archestratus where and when, Andrew Dalby
      • Problems in Greek gastronomic poetry - on the attic banquet of Matro, Enzo Degani
      • The sources and sauces of Athenaeus, John Wilkins and Shaun Hill
      • Comic food and food for comedy, Dwora Gilula
      • Archestratos: Where and When?, Andrew Dalby
      • Problems in Greek Gastronomic Poetry: on Matro’s Attikon Deipnon, Enzo Degani
      • The Sources and Sauces of Athenaeus, John Wilkins
      • Index of passages discussed
      • General index

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