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Gelişmiş Arama
Cover image for Food in antiquity
Başlık:
Food in antiquity
Yazar:
Wilkins, John, 1954-
ISBN:
9780859894180
Yayım Bilgisi:
Exeter, UK : University of Exeter Press, 2003.
Fiziksel Tanım:
xiii, 459 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Corporate Subject:
Arkeoloji ihtisas kütüphanesi -- 73394
Konu Terimleri:
Food habits -- History.

Food -- History.

Food habits -- Greece -- History.

Food habits -- Rome -- History.

Food habits -- Mediterranean Region -- History.

Gastronomy in literature.

Food in literature.

Beslenme alışkanlıkları -- Tarih.

Besin -- Tarih.

Beslenme alışkanlıkları -- Yunanistan -- Tarih.

Beslenme alışkanlıkları -- Roma -- Tarih.

Beslenme alışkanlıkları -- Akdeniz Bölgesi -- Tarih.

Gastronomi, literatürde.
Geographic Term:
Yunanistan -- Sosyal yaşam ve gelenekler.

Greece -- Social life and customs.
Added Author:
Wilkins, John, 1954-

Harvey, F. D. (F. David).

Dobson, Michael J.

Mevcut:*

Library
Materyal Türü
Barkod
Yer Numarası
Durum
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Pamukkale Merkez Kütüphanesi
Kitap 0051826 GT2860F66 2003
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Unknown
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Pamukkale Merkez Kütüphanesi
Kitap 0073394 GT2860F66 2003
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Özet

Özet

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. In this volume thirty contributors consider aspects of food and eating in the Greco-Roman world. This is the most comprehensive exploration of questions relating to food in antiquity in this country. The authors, some specialists in this field, others with expertise in other areas, use a range of approaches to investigate the production and distribution of food, social, religious and political factors, medicine and diet, cultural identity and contrasts with neighbouring cultures, and food in literature. The volume is designed for both Classicists and those interested in the history of food. The aim is both to illuminate and to entertain, and at the same time to remind the reader that the Greeks and Romans were not only philosophers and rulers of empires, they were also peasant farmers, traders and consumers of foods who considered that what and how they ate defined who they were.


Author Notes

David Harvey was, until his retirement, Lecturer in Classics, University of Exeter. John Wilkins is Professor in Greek Literature, University of Exeter. He is a specialist in the history of food in Greco-Roman culture, with current interests in literature (especially comic drama) and medicine (especially nutrition). His books include Food in Antiquity: Studies in Ancient Society and Culture (Exeter, 1996). Mike Dobson is Director of Humanities Computing and Director of Studies for Information Technology at the University of Exeter.


Table of Contents

ForewordAlan Davidson
General IntroductionJohn Wilkins
Part 1 The production and preparation of cereals and staples: acornutopiaSarah Mason
Barley cakes and emmer breadThomas Braun
Roman bread and cerealsK.D. White
Byzantine porridgeStephen Hill and Anthony Bryer
Ethnoarchaeology and storage in the ancient MediterraneanHamish Forbes and Lin Foxhall
Clibanus and sub testu in the Roman worldA.C. Cubberley
Molecular biology and ancient historyRobert Sallares
Part 2 Meat and fish: the Roman meat tradeJoan Frayn
The Apician sauceJon Solomon
Fish from the Black sea - classical Byzantium and the Greekness of tradeDavid Braund
The paradoxes of seafoodNicholas Purcell
A pretty kettle of fishBrian Sparkes
Part 3 The social and religious context of food and eating: cereal diet and the origins of manGerhard Baudy
Ritual eating - the case of the parasiteLouise Bruit
Ancient vegetarianismCatharine Osborne
Attitudes to fasting womenVeronika Grimm-Samuel
The control of foods by sumptuary lawsLiugi Gallo
Revolutionary eating at AthensJames Davidson
Part 4 Foreign foods: food and frontier in the Greek colonies of Southern ItalyMario Lombardo
Persian food - food stereotypes and political identityHeleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg
Lydian foodDavid Harvey
Food and archaeology in Romano-Byzantine PalestineSimon Dar
Food for Egyptian temple workersDorothy Thompson
The oldest recipes of allJean Bottero
Celtic foodsPeter Reynolds.
Part 5 Food and medicine: hippokratic diaitaElizabeth Craik
Hippokratic gynaecologyHelen King
Galen and the traveller's fareVivian Nutton
Oribasius and medical dietetics or the three P'sMark Grant
Part 6 Food and literature: archestratus where and whenAndrew Dalby
Problems in Greek gastronomic poetry - on the attic banquet of MatroEnzo Degani
The sources and sauces of AthenaeusJohn Wilkins and Shaun Hill
Comic food and food for comedyDwora Gilula
Archestratos: Where and When?Andrew Dalby
Problems in Greek Gastronomic Poetry: on Matro's Attikon DeipnonEnzo Degani
The Sources and Sauces of AthenaeusJohn Wilkins
Index of passages discussed
General index
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