Sign up
Forgot password?
FAQ: Login

Karg S.(ed.) Medieval Food Traditions in Northern Europe

  • pdf file
  • size 3,93 MB
  • added by
  • info modified
Karg S.(ed.) Medieval Food Traditions in Northern Europe
Copenhagen: The National Museum of Denmark, 2007. — 226 p.
Papers from an International Research Project: The HANSA Network 2001–2006.
History can be colourful and even very appetising when different research disciplines are melted together. In this book, botanical data from archaeological excavations are combined with historical knowledge on the use of plants during medieval and early modern times. The result is a comprehensive account of the introduction of new plant foods, including exotic fruits and spices, into the traditional medieval societies of Northern Europe.
One of the prime motivating factors for the authors of this book was a desire to summarize and present, for the first time, the botanical data deriving from archaeological deposits excavated in Germany, Northern Poland, Estonia, Finland, Sweden, Denmark and Norway; countries involved in the trading activities of the Hanse.
The geographical frame is centred on Northern and Central Europe, enclosing primarily the countries delimited by the North Sea and the Baltic. Results are presented from an area stretching from Bergen in the west to Tallinn in the east, from Turku in the north to the cities of the Rhineland in the south. Between the 12th and 17th centuries, this great area had one thing in common, the strict control of trading activities exerted by German traders belonging to the Hanseatic League. This comprehensive publication deals with finds of plant material arising from the archaeological excavation of sites dating from this period.
Food consumption in the Hanseatic towns of Germany
Useful plants in medieval and post-medieval archaeobotanical material from the Hanseatic towns of Northern Poland (Kołobrzeg, Gdańsk and Elbląg)
An archaeobotanical approach to investigating food of the Hanseatic period in Estonia
Archaeobotanical evidence of plants from the medieval period to early modern times in Finland
Sweden and the Hanse – archaeobotanical aspects of changes in farming, gardening and dietary habits in medieval times in Sweden
Long term dietary traditions: archaeobotanical records from Denmark dated to the Middle Ages and early modern times
Foreign trade and local production – plant remains from medieval times in Norway
Synthesis and a mission for the future
Index of the HANSA plant list in English and Latin
  • Sign up or login using form at top of the page to download this file.
  • Sign up
Up