Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Apéritif
- Chapter 2 The food itself
- Chapter 3 The packaging
- Chapter 4 The human remains
- Chapter 5 Written evidence
- Chapter 6 Kitchen and dining basics: techniques and utensils
- Chapter 7 The store cupboard
- Chapter 8 Staples
- Chapter 9 Meat
- Chapter 10 Dairy products
- Chapter 11 Poultry and eggs
- Chapter 12 Fish and shellfish
- Chapter 13 Game
- Chapter 14 Greengrocery
- Chapter 15 Drink
- Chapter 16 The end of independence
- Chapter 17 A brand-new province
- Chapter 18 Coming of age
- Chapter 19 A different world
- Chapter 20 Digestif
- Appendix: Data sources for tables
- References
- Index
Chapter 1 - Apéritif
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Apéritif
- Chapter 2 The food itself
- Chapter 3 The packaging
- Chapter 4 The human remains
- Chapter 5 Written evidence
- Chapter 6 Kitchen and dining basics: techniques and utensils
- Chapter 7 The store cupboard
- Chapter 8 Staples
- Chapter 9 Meat
- Chapter 10 Dairy products
- Chapter 11 Poultry and eggs
- Chapter 12 Fish and shellfish
- Chapter 13 Game
- Chapter 14 Greengrocery
- Chapter 15 Drink
- Chapter 16 The end of independence
- Chapter 17 A brand-new province
- Chapter 18 Coming of age
- Chapter 19 A different world
- Chapter 20 Digestif
- Appendix: Data sources for tables
- References
- Index
Summary
This is a book that takes that most common question ‘What shall we have for dinner?’ and uses it to explore the communities that lived in Britain during the first half of the first millennium AD (a period that will hereafter be called Roman Britain as a convenient shorthand). Subject-matter such as this has not always been thought very respectable. Certainly it has not been considered central to the story of Roman Britain. Yet in many ways there is no better way of understanding past societies. Eating and drinking are frequently about much more than sustaining life by the ingestion of sufficient calories. What you can and cannot eat, who you can and cannot eat it with, tends not to be so much a matter of personal choice, as the result of social conditioning. By studying the eating patterns of a society, you enter areas far beyond the mere nutritional. Eating and drinking rituals will quite frequently take you into the realms of religious beliefs, class, gender relationships, and ethnicity. Or, as Brillat-Savarin said more succinctly, ‘Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you what you are’.
The information that can be used for this study is entirely dependent on archaeological exploration. The scanty ancient sources that have traditionally underpinned the study of Roman Britain are virtually silent on the topic; and, when they do say anything relevant, can generally be shown to be unreliable witnesses. Archaeology, by contrast, produces data in almost embarrassing abundance.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Eating and Drinking in Roman Britain , pp. 1 - 7Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006