p-tableware-msg - 12/27/06 Period tableware, knives, spoons, forks, salt cellars. Paintings and other period references to tableware. NOTE: See also these files: feastgear-msg, utensils-msg, iron-pot-care-msg, pottery-msg, spoons-msg, forks-msg, jugs-pitchrs-lnks, table-fountns-msg. KEYWORDS: tableware knives forks spoons mugs chalices cups ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ From: vcarpentier at berksys.com (Victoria Carpentier) Newsgroups: rec.food.historic,rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Request:medieval feast Date: 23 Sep 1994 23:15:06 GMT Organization: BSI > >I want recipes to cook a medieval feast, with my kids. We have read a few > >>kids books that describe the royal banquet. They didn't have plates, they > "They didn't have plates" is an overstatement. I believe at least the > wealthier feasters would have trenchers ON plates. Anyway, many rich You can find references to wooden and pewter plates in art works and old writings. At least for the Rennaissance. Bowls were also common. Victoria From: jtn at cse.uconn.EDU (J. Terry Nutter) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Period tableware and dishes Date: 20 Mar 1995 20:57:59 -0500 Greetings, all, from Angharad ver' Rhuawn. Lady Bronwen Selwyn writes: > I have been asked to teach a class on Period place settings.... > > I am fairly...{18 months}...new to SCA and do not know much more that from > personal experience. I would appreciate it if anyone could help give me > some facts on the matter, in particular, forks. I have heard so many > various things on them. I know about being three pronged and making there > way from Italy. But there always seems to be a great deal of variance on > the time, anywhere from beginning in the 13th century to being only late > period. Also I am curious as to what social classes tended to use them. With regard to forks, there was an article by Catherina Sforza d'Agro in _TI_ about five years ago on forks; someone in your area may have the edition. (Sorry, my _TI_s are in Virginia, and I'm in Connecticut.) However, that isn't where I'd start, in your place. If you have access to a serious library, look for (or request by interlibrary loan) the following volume: Furnivall, Frederick J., _Early English Meals and Manners_, Early English Text Society Original Series #32, (London: Oxford University Press), 1868. Don't be scared away by the date! This is an edition of several period manuscripts on the subject, including John Russell's Boke of Nurture, Wynkyn de Worde's Boke of Kervynge, and the Boke of Curtasye. They include all _kinds_ of details about how tables should be set. The scholarship of the edition is as fine as you will find. Many, many libraries have copies of the Early English Text Society's series; this is quite accessible. -- Angharad From: HPGV80D at prodigy.com (Patricia Hefner) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Period tableware and dishes Date: 25 Mar 1995 05:55:21 GMT Organization: Prodigy Services Company 1-800-PRODIGY Mikjal--I found reference to "vessels" in the early regulations of the College de Sorbonne from around 1260. Napkins are also mentioned, but forks are not! ---Isabelle From: jerryn at crl.com (Kati Norris) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Period tableware and dishes Date: 25 Mar 1995 17:50:14 GMT Organization: Cathlin ban Gerald / Stargate / Ansteorra In article <3kvugp$80v at giga.bga.com>, cmwalden at bga.com (Antonio Bastiano) says: >jtn at cse.uconn.EDU (J. Terry Nutter) says: >>> I have been asked to teach a class on Period place settings.... > >Actually, one discovery that I have made about period settings is rather >interesting. We spend a great deal of time discussing flatware, but from >what I have seen the centerpiece of the table was the salt-cellar. It >was a container for holding salt, and from early period to late period >was designed to make a statement. They were ornate and usually designed >to look as though they contained more than they did--with pedestals and >bulky decoration. > >I have been assembling a salt cellar from "bits." It does change the >point of view of the table. Gives it a different emphasis. (It's so >hard for us to relate to because we throw salt on the street and try not >to over use it on our food!) > >Yours, etc. >Antonio Bastiano >or cmwalden at bga.com We've been trying to get a small wooden (or ceramic) bowl and tiny spoon for a salt cellar. But I've also read in Life in Medieval Cities (or Times) that the salt was put in a piece of bread with a hole scooped out for the salt. We'd also like a place to keep pepper (OOP I know because of the cost back then) and garlic powder on the table. It seems that feast fare lacks these items and my lord (almost) requires them in his food. Any suggestions will be most welcome. Many thanks, Caitlin ban Gerald Barony of Stargate / Kingdom of Ansteorra From: schuldy at abel.harvard.edu (Mark Schuldenfrei) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Period tableware and dishes Date: 28 Mar 1995 20:02:43 GMT Someone (lost in the attributions) wrote: I have been asked to teach a class on Period place settings.... Do take the time to find "The Boke of Nurture" John Russell, reprinted by the Early English Text Society. It covers linens, napkins, table service and more. It actually explained a few modern things for me.... if you go to a proper restaurant, the waiter serves from over your left shoulder. Why? Boke of Nurture mentions that a long napkin should be placed on your lap, and over your left shoulder, so the server doesn't drip with a full plate on you... Some day, probably not far off, I am going to prepare full table service that matches what is required by Boke of Nurture. Teach my friends and frequent table mates to use it, and have a *good* time. Tibor (working from memory, and therefore possibly in error) -- Mark Schuldenfrei (schuldy at math.harvard.edu) From: hrjones at uclink.berkeley.edu (Heather Rose Jones) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Dinner in Poland in 1220 Date: 5 Jul 1995 17:41:42 GMT Organization: University of California, Berkeley Cc: jenn at sover.net Jennifer Frizzell (jenn at maple.sover.net) wrote: : Somebody help! I'm trying to recreate a Polish Counts : tablesetting in a 1220 period. Let me begin by saying that Poland of any period is not something that I have made a study of, so I can't say much to the specifics of this question, but I can, perhaps, give advice on the approach. : Now let me give you everything I know so : far. Glass wasn't introduced to poland until 1500, I would be very surprised to discover that this was true. Even if Poland did not develop a significant local glass industry until this time (something I find improbable), imports of luxury glass items would still be expected. : lace wasn't introduced : until 1480 and silver smithing was in it's glory at about 1200 so it : seems obvious that silver and wood are the predominate products used in : tableware. What about ceramics? Horn? Baser metals such as bronze and pewter? : The real questions lay in what utensils were used. What were the : designs in the plates and what kind of plates were used. : Also, since most of the main food animals were goat-sized or : smaller, then most of the plates would only be about 1ft in diameter or : less. Does this really follow? Plates for personal service are rarely designed for entire animals. If the meat has been parboiled, hacked into gobbets, and cooked into a sauce, how does the size of the animal relate to the size of the plate? : Also, pitchers for milk would be small due to the lack of : refrigeration capabilities (you try and use it up before it gets bad). Pitchers are generally used for temporary transport and ease of service. To this end, the functional constraints tend to be how easy they are to lift and manoever and how much of the contents is likely to be wanted at a particular event. Again, I think you are focussing on irrelevant factors, which makes it hard to come to accurate conclusions. The best places to begin, if you want to learn something about 13th century Polish tableware would be illustrated catalogs of relevant archaeological digs, and artistic representations of the period. Are there illuminated manuscripts dating from Poland in this era? Many biblical scenes involve eating, and the common custom in such illuminations is to reflect contemporary (not actual Biblical) practice. I note that one of my costuming books has illustrations from something referred to as "The Maciejowski Bible" dating from the 13th century (in the collection of the Pierpont Morgan Library). While the name appears to be Polish, it isn't clear whether it refers to the books original provenance or simply to some later owner, but it would certainly be a place to start. These types of approaches will be far more profitable in the long run than conclusions based on speculation alone. Tangwystyl verch Morgant Glasvryn From: mwl at celsiustech.se (Matt Larsen) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Dinner in Poland in 1220 Date: 7 Jul 1995 11:03:43 +0200 Organization: CelsiusTech AB Jennifer Frizzell (jenn at maple.sover.net) wrote: : Somebody help! I'm trying to recreate a Polish Counts : tablesetting in a 1220 period. Now let me give you everything I know so : far. I've been looking at table service in the 14th and 15th centuries for a while, although mostly in France and England. So some of what I know may apply, but I can't really promise anything :-) : Glass wasn't introduced to poland until 1500, lace wasn't introduced : until 1480 To the best of my knowledge this is correct. They seem to have table cloths and sometimes napkins, though. : and silver smithing was in it's glory at about 1200 so it : seems obvious that silver and wood are the predominate products used in : tableware. Others have suggested pottery, and it is certainly true that pottery was in use throughout the period, so this may be an alternative for you. But I believe you are also correct in believing that any wealthy person would have eaten off of or at least drunk from silver. The goblet or cup as we know it seems to have been a relatively late fashion, and it seems that most drinking was done from bowls. These are known as "hanaps" when made from silver (or gold), and are sometimes decorated with engraving or other forms of decoration. Wooden drinking bowls were called "mazurs" and again are sometimes elaborately decorated, usually with carving or a foot or rim of silver. Various shapes were used, but a common one is very similar to what we think of as a normal bowl with a bit of an upward bulge in the center. : The real questions lay in what utensils were used. What were the : designs in the plates and what kind of plates were used. As for utensils, knives come in two types: large (approx. 1 foot long) carving and serving knives and smaller eating knives. Almost all eating knives seem to have been single edged, and the most common shape is a straight back edge extending from the top of the handle to the point, with the blade curving down slightly from the handle underneath and then up to meet the back at the point (Hmm. I'm not sure this is very clear. You really need to see a picture of one...). Forks were relatively uncommon, usually two tined, and seem to have been mostly used for eating sticky deserts. Spoons have a wide, shallow bowl, almost too large to fit in the mouth, and a straight handle extending back to (usually) some kind of decorative knop. Handles tend to be slim and long in England and France, and short and thick in Scandanavia. Your guess is as good as mine which style prevailed in Poland :-) Surviving spoons are almost always in silver, and wills and such suggest that even most middle class people would have owned a few silver spoons. : Also, since most of the main food animals were goat-sized or : smaller, then most of the plates would only be about 1ft in diameter or : less. In the 16th century plates seem to be mostly large, between 12" and 16", and surviving examples are as likely to be pewter as they are to be silver. There are very few existing plates (that I've found) from before the 16th c., but iconographical evidence suggests that plates were often relatively small, more like 7" or so. One usually sees servers in the same pictures, so I expect that as soon as one ate the relatively small amount on ones plate, a server would cut something new to put on it. There are some extant wooden plates, and they tend to be small, again about 7" - 8" in diameter. : Also, pitchers for milk would be small due to the lack of : refrigeration capabilities (you try and use it up before it gets bad). I think pitchers came in all sizes. Most of the surviving ones in precious metals are small, but there are large pottery and leather jugs. There are also brass pitchers, and they are often paired with a basin and would have been used for washing hands before eating. I have also seen many pewter pitchers in various sizes, but they mostly seem to be from the 16th c., although this may simply be that earlier ones were melted down and remade. It seems, by the way, that pewter in general was very popular in the 16th century, because of the rise of the middle class who were trying to imitate more wealthy people who ate off of silver. Candlesticks, by the way, were usually of cast brass or bronze, and were of the pricket variety until quite late in period (about the latter half of the 16th c.). : If anyone has any information which could help me in this area, : please forward it to Jenn at sover.net This is obviously a very quick sketch of this topic. If anyone has specific questions, let me know. I can't cite a lot of reference works, although I've got a few good ones. Most of what I've learned I've found out by haunting museums (I've got some interesting photos, but... :-) Geoffrey Mathias mjl at rational.com From: mjc at telerama.lm.com (Monica Cellio) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Period wares (was jurying merchants) Date: 2 Jul 1996 10:35:24 -0400 Organization: Telerama Public Access Internet, Pittsburgh, PA USA ... And a couple years ago at Pennsic I actually had a merchant show me documentation. (This was for those utensils that have tines (like a fork) at one end and a spoon at the other; turns out they're 9th-century Anglo-Saxon, not a modern invention. And not nearly as difficult to eat with as you might think.) Ellisif http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mjc/ellisif.html From: Patsy Dunham Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Period knives and shoes (was jurying merchants) Date: 3 Jul 1996 15:56:44 GMT Organization: City of Eugene, Eugene OR USA For a good Norse eating knife, check your local hardware store. We have found Swedish knife blanks (blade is about 4 1/2", tang is 3 1/2") that look exactly right; all you have to do is add a handle. (they're imprinted with the co. name and "Suede" in a little round pattern near the hilt end of the blade-- sorry I can't be more specific but mine's at home, not at work) For period shoes (esp. Norse), short of do-it-yourselfing, you can also try taking your pattern to the local hippie marketplace (we have a BIG Saturday Market here about 9 mo. of the year) and look for the best moccasin/boot maker... Chimene chimenedes at aol.com From: bhw at psyc.nott.ac.uk Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Table settings Date: Tue, 24 Sep 1996 13:17:59 +0100 Organization: Cripps Computing Centre, The University of Nottingham Kristine E. Maitland wrote: > I'm entering a contest (next Septentrian 12th Night) which involves > setting a table. Can anyone recommend books/journal articles/primary > sources on table setting (ceramics, glassware, silverware, linens etc...) > circa early 1500s Italy. I have seen an absolutely superb book for this - it contained hundreds of pictures from renaissance italian paintings to illustrate domestic architecture, including table settings. One thing I remember particularly is that a common drinking vessel is a clear straight sided glass - it looks exactly like a modern "highball" glass. Now, annoyingly, I can't find the reference: if anyone could help out I'd be grateful. Caitlin From: odlin at reed.edu (Iain Odlin) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Table settings Date: 25 Sep 1996 09:31:47 GMT Kristine E. Maitland wrote: > I'm entering a contest (next Septentrian 12th Night) which involves > setting a table. Can anyone recommend books/journal articles/primary > sources on table setting (ceramics, glassware, silverware, linens etc...) > circa early 1500s Italy. *The* book to look for: The Italian Renaissance Interior 1400-1600 by Peter Thornton. ISBN 0-8109-3459-0. Nearly five hundred pictures in four hundred pages. Excellent source, hard to find. -Iain, who got his copy at a used bookstore for $15 from the "It's been here for a long time" bin ------------------------- Iain Odlin, odlin at reed.edu ------------------------- 42 Clifton Street, Portland ME 04101 From: pat at lalaw.lib.CA.US (Pat Lammerts) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Table settings Date: 25 Sep 1996 19:47:42 -0400 It was written: > *The* book to look for: The Italian Renaissance Interior 1400-1600 > by Peter Thornton. ISBN 0-8109-3459-0. Nearly five hundred pictures in > four hundred pages. Excellent source, hard to find. > > -Iain, who got his copy at a used bookstore for $15 from the "It's been here > for a long time" bin Boy, what a bargain you got, Iain! The book is still in print and, per Books in Print, it is $125.00. Here are the details: Thornton, Peter, 1926- The Italian Renaissance interior, 1400-1600 / Peter Thornton. New York : H.N. Abrams, 1991. 407 p. : ill. (some col.), plans ; 27 cm. ISBN 0810934590 or, since Kristine is in Canada, here is the British version for L65.00: Thornton, Peter. The Italian Renaissance interior, 1400-1600 / Peter Thornton. London : Weidenfeld and Nicolson, c1991. 407 p. : ill. (some col.), plans ; 27 x 27 cm. ISBN 0297830066 Huette (pat at lalaw.lib.ca.us) From: deewolff at aol.com (DeeWolff) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Table settings Date: 25 Sep 1996 20:17:59 -0400 "The Art of Dining- A History of Cooking and Eating" Sara Paston-Williams ( The National Trust1993 ), I got it from Poison Pen Press in the East Kingdom. Excellent background on food, tables set, and service of such. Wish you luck !! Andrea MacIntyre of Ostgardr From: afn03234 at freenet2.afn.org (Ronald L. Charlotte) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Table settings Date: 27 Sep 1996 11:13:56 GMT bq676 at torfree.net (Kristine E. Maitland) wrote: > I'm entering a contest (next Septentrian 12th Night) which involves > setting a table. Can anyone recommend books/journal articles/primary > sources on table setting (ceramics, glassware, silverware, linens etc...) > circa early 1500s Italy. Articles on the same for the Mamluks and the > Ottoman empire would also be appreciated. > Ines The first that comes to mind is Castiglione's _Book of the Courtier_. Another is by R. Strong, _Splendour at Court: Renaissance Spectacle and Illusion_. I have heard recommended _Savouring the Past: the french Kitchen and Table from 1300 to 1789_ by B. Ketchan Wheaton, but I've not yet had a chance to read it. -- al Thaalibi ---- An Crosaire, Trimaris Ron Charlotte -- Gainesville, FL afn03234 at afn.org Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 14:01:18 -0500 (CDT) From: timbeck at ix.netcom.com To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu Subject: Re: Chalice, goblet, something >It is my intentions to attempt a drinking vessel and maybe a bowl and plate >in brass for Queens Prize. Just looking for documation ideas. Know of any >good books? >Ld Malgar Thorvik I found a great book for documentation of high-end medieval cups, &c. is _Secular Goldsmith's Work in Medieval France: A History_ by Ronald W. Lightbown, F.S.A. ISBN 0 500 99027 1 You might be able to get it from Amazon. Also there is a medieval catalog of 1940 (or something to that effect) put out by the Museum of London which has a some pieces which represent the more common items of the time. This book covers many topics and the cup info may be sparse. Beakers are a cool item which seem to have come in all levels of cost and quality and are certainly under represented in the SCA....So are most metal cups for that matter... Hope this helps, Timothy Date: Wed, 23 Jul 1997 23:57:49 -0500 (CDT) From: Mark Weiland Subject: SC - Re: sca-cooks V1 #208 >From: Philip & Susan Troy I must apologise for not making it clear that most, but not all, of my research is focused on the Italian Peninsula of the 13th thru 17th centuries. >Hmm. While in general I agree with you, but when you say that >presentation is more vital to an accurate recreation of period food than >we give it credit for, you lose me. It's not that I don't feel >presentation is important, but it sounds, from what you say, that you >are superimposing modern values on our medieval or renaissance >counterparts. While many good cooks in the Society go to great lengths to ensure well researched recipes, how many times is the hall and table setting catch as catch can. The first part of Cristoforo da Messisbugo's BANCHETTI is dedicated to who came to dinner, how to set the hall, how many table cloths to place on the table, how many silver candlesticks should be used, how many silver salt cellars to use, and more in the same vain. When Montaigne visited Rome in 1580 he wrote"In front of those to whom they want to do particular honor,who are seated beside of opposite the master, they place big silver squares on which their salt cellar stands, of the same sort they put before the great in France. On top of this there is a napkin folded in four and on this napkin is the bread, knife, fork, and spoon." In Sano di Pietro's (1406-1481) painting the ST. PETER HEALING PETRONELLA one can see wonderful clear glass carafes and glasses filled with red wine. There are more paintings that help us to come to a more clear understanding of what a period table and meal would have looked like and I contend that the guests (nobles) did not bring their own plates,linens and candles and that the food was presented in the most appealing way possible. Balthazar Date: Wed, 15 Apr 1998 18:17:55 -0500 From: vjarmstrong at aristotle.net (Valoise Armstrong) Subject: Re: SC - Carving books? Several years ago I got a great German book on carving through interlibrary loan. The title says that it's about table customs to the end of the Middle Ages, but as I recall there was quite a lot about carvers and the art of carving. It's a good secondary source and if you can handle the German worth looking up. There are also some great photographs of dishes and eating utensils. Schiedlausky, Gunther. Essen und trinken: Tafelsitten bis zum Ausgang des Mittelalters. Munich: Prestel Verlag, 1956. Valoise Date: Tue, 19 May 1998 21:37:26 EDT From: freyja1 at juno.com (Timothy A Whitcomb) To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu Subject: Re: Wooden feast gear documentation >A question has been put to me by a member of my canton, as to >documentation for a set of wooden feast gear she would like to make - >what it might look like (plates vs. trenchers, for instance), what kind >of wood to use, etc. She has been having some trouble finding adequate >resources locally. > >Rhodri ap Hywel This may help just a little: in "medieval Pottery in Britain AD900-1600" by McCarthy and Brooks, there is a chapter on alternatives to clay wares and I believe there is a photo of a wooden platter. Hroar Date: Wed, 20 May 1998 08:53:47 -0500 From: vjarmstrong at aristotle.net (Valoise Armstrong) To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu Subject: Re: Wooden feast gear documentation >A question has been put to me by a member of my canton, as to >documentation for a set of wooden feast gear she would like to make - >what it might look like (plates vs. trenchers, for instance), what kind >of wood to use, etc. She has been having some trouble finding adequate >resources locally. There are some pictures in Essen und Trinken: Tafelsitten bis zum Ausgang des Mittelalters by Guenther Schiedlausky that show round wooden plates. These are simple rounds of wood with no rim of any kind - soupy stuff would run off the sides. One group of plates is completely unadorned, but there is another set that has scenes painted in the center, like sewing, harvesting, etc. from different months of the year. There is lettering running around the the outside the painted scene. Schiedlausky doesn't say what kind of wood it is, but hardwood seems reasonable. Should be easy to make. Have you looked at any Brueghel peasant paintings? He depicts feasts in simple settings, maybe he shows some wooden tableware along with the pottery. Valoise Date: 21 May 98 09:06:12 AST From: RMcGrath at dca.gov.au To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu Subject: Re: Wooden feast gear documentation I would suggest that you look at The Wedding. http://familiar.sph.umich.edu/cjackson/bruegel1/p-brueg1-7.htm In the foreground you can see table ware. Rakhel Date: Thu, 21 May 1998 04:59:48 -0400 From: Melanie Wilson To: "INTERNET:sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu" Subject: Wooden feast gear I just remembered I saw an article on turning of bowls etc in a UK re-enacting mag some time again as I remember most were turned wet, bowls were popular not platters or plates as the wood warped and a platter then became unusable. If you want more I think there is some refs etc, let me know and I'll try to find it , otherwise it might be on the web page of the mag. Search for CALL TO ARMS they have a web page. Mel Date: Tue, 20 Oct 1998 19:56:22 EDT From: LrdRas at aol.com Subject: Re: SC - feastware question kiriel at cybergal.com writes: << Don't forget everyone; glassware has been around forever. Jugs, mugs, glasses, bowls, the lot. People seem to forget glass and only go for ceramic, metal or wood. . . More glass more glass! Kiriel >> This is correct. The Cloisters in NYC has a collection of medieval glassware on display that is to die for. The intricacy of the patterns is astounding. They even have salt cellars of hand blown crystal that look like ships with rigging and sales all done in glass. There is a tendency for some recreationists to wrongly emphasize the simple wares when the reality of medieval culture is exactly the opposite. Ras Date: Tue, 20 Oct 1998 19:58:20 EDT From: LrdRas at aol.com Subject: Re: SC - feastware question parlei at algonet.se writes: << Considering the most likely price of extensive amounts of glass in "my" time and place I would not have been using much of it. >> According to the tour guide at the Cloisters glass plates, etc. were 'common' enough that wagons went around collecting the broken glass dishes so they could be remelted and fashioned into more glassware. This does not indicate that they were either rare of terribly expensive. Ras Date: Mon, 04 Jan 1999 16:02:23 -0500 From: capriest at cs.vassar.edu (Carolyn Priest-Dorman) To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu Subject: RE: placemat size? [SCA] Eachna wrote: >My question (I realize it's not *your* question, but, just to clarify since >I started the thread), is not about the "periodness" of things. It's about >what size placemat people use with feast gear. The ones I just wove are about 11x17" finished size. We use placemats every day at home (although never at feasts), and that's a fairly typical size for boughten ones also. >OTOH, it would be interesting to learn when placemats were developed...my >first guess would be whenever tablecloths were first valued for their >decorative purposes...(that is, to catch drips and stains from food >dropping off plates) "Valued for their decorative purposes" is, I suspect, in the eye of the beholder. ;> After all, linen cloths, even plain ones, can be easier on the eyes than boards over trestles! And they're easier to launder than pretty much anything out there; linen seems to thrive on hot water and soap. Copious napkins, towels, and cloths were used at table (read some of the fifteenth-century English treatises about table service in _Early English Meals and Manners_--it's fascinating!), perhaps obviating the need for specialized mats. The sixteenth century was a high point in the weaving of elaborate linen damasks for table use, but I've never heard of a placemat that early. Carolyn Priest-Dorman Thora Sharptooth capriest at cs.vassar.edu Frostahlid, Austrriki Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 09:36:10 SAST-2 From: "Christina van Tets" Subject: SC - goblet covers Do the covers have to be cloth? There are plenty of secular goblet pictures which have a matching lid (not quite hemispherical, with knob). The only time I have seen a cloth cover is the square kind that covers the paten dish (for holding the bread) when it is on top of the chalice in a communion set, and I don't think that's awfully appropriate. Cairistiona Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 19:43:50 -0500 From: rmhowe To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu Subject: Spoon Book from Coventry Well, here goes another citation from Magnus - (If we all do enough of them maybe we can all get authentic. I remember when you couldn't find a decent sword.) I got a book today from a used bookstore in Scotland: Pewter Spoons and Other Related Material of the 14th - 17th Centuries. By Sara Muldoon and Roger Brownsword In the collection of the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum Coventry. Published Apparently by the City of Coventy Leisure Services ISBN 0901606286 Paper, no date. Looks very recent though. Large Format, a bit over 30 pages with good illustrations and schematics of spoon handle shapes. Shows the major bottom part of one mold quite clearly. 31 large clear illustrations. Has a detailed analysis of alloys including latten, and a short discussion of molding and casting techniques and materials. Page and a third biblography. If anyone learns of any other books from this series I'd like to have them cite them. Magnus Date: Sun, 14 Nov 1999 12:34:37 +0100 From: Thomas Gloning Subject: SC - pictures of feasts Lady Diana said: <<< Maybe others will have time to offer sources from other countries >>> Jean-Louis Flandrin/Carole Lambert, 'Fêtes gourmandes au Moyen Age' (Paris 1998) has pictures with stuff mostly from French collections, but also from Swiss collections, from the Netherlands and from Belgium. A beautiful book. Best, Thomas (I have not seen this one up to now: E. Schirmer: Die deutsche Irdenware des 11.-15. Jahrhunderts im engeren Mitteldeutschland. Jena 1939.) Date: Sun, 14 Nov 1999 10:16:01 EST From: RuddR at aol.com Subject: SC - pictures of feasts Gwyneth asks: "I have a friend who does pottery and has volunteered to make me some plates, bowls, etc. to use when I do period displays, meals, and the like. What I need are pictures to show him. Could anyone recomend a few good source books or perhaps a web site or two?" Check out Master Huen's "Feast for the Eyes" at: http://www.labs.net/dmccormick/medpix.htm and also "The Age of Charles V, Sports and Entertainment" from the Biblioteque Nationale de France, at: http://www.bnf.fr/enluminures/themes/t_4/ast_4_02.htm Rudd Rayfield Date: Thu, 03 Feb 2000 08:32:01 +1100 From: Lorix Subject: SC - Interesting Period Gadget for washing hands I have a very big failing, I Luuuuuuv gadgets. Now my eye was caught by a particularly impressive mid 16th Century doodad for the washing of hands. The picture was in a book by Alison Sim (Food & Feast in Tudor England). Basically the major form of it was similar to a modern toy railway engine, only this little beauty looked to be made out of gold. In its middle was placed a small rounded barrel with a spigot (smaller scale, but like the wooden barrels that wine is aged in). According to the accompanying text, the internal mechanism was still in perfect working order and it was supposed to roll slowly down the feasting table oozing droplets of rosewater so that people could clean their hands. It was extremely decorative & I thought it was rather nifty. However my husband, a man of infinite patience with my whims, has refused to even contemplate the idea of making it. So I thought there might be someone out there of an engineering bent who might like to try it. It would certainly liven up high table, think of the disastrous possibilities that could occur with ummm inept engineering ;-) Lorix Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2000 20:36:53 -0600 From: david friedman Subject: Re: SC - Tablewear At 3:28 PM -0800 3/10/00, lilinah at earthlink.net wrote: >I know that the prevailing wisdom is that the forks wouldn't really >have been used in Elizabethan England, but at small fairs we buy our >food, often Thai stir fried noodles (don't ask), since i'm primarily >vegetarian, and forks come in handy. > >But a late period Byzantine reenactor says on his website that there >is evidence of two-pronged forks at that time (i think around the >time of the of the Seljuk Turks - what's that, 11th to 13th C., i >think) >http://www-personal.une.edu.au/~tdawson/tware.html The Cleveland Museum of Art has a Byzantine fork; I don't remember the date, but I think it is earlier than the 11th century. The British Museum has an Anglo-saxon fork and spoon set. The Victoria and Albert Museum published a pamphlet on tableware, which contains a reproduction of what the author thinks is the first painting showing someone eating with a fork; my vague memory is that it is about 13th century. The situation, so far as I can tell, is that forks existed through most of our period in Europe, as rather uncommon eating utensils--think of a modern equivalent as a fondue fork, which exists but isn't used all that often. In the seventeenth century (I think) they shifted to being part of the standard set of eating utensils. I believe that forks also existed as cooking utensils through most of our period. Hope that helps. So far as practical solutions to eating stir fried noodles in persona, I would eat them with my (right) hand--as, I gather, would you. I think eating things that can be eaten with the fingers but nowadays are not is a useful touch--one more element that suggests how someone from a different culture would respond to things. David/Cariadoc http://www.best.com/~ddfr/ Date: Mon, 17 Apr 2000 15:24:19 -0400 From: Elaine Koogler Subject: Re: SC - Plastic Ware (change to Forks??) Oh goodie....another thread, sort of. I ran into something Saturday at the event I cooked, that I thought you all might like ti "chew on". One of our metal workers, and a very talented one who does serious research, I might add, was selling a thing that I christened a "spork". it is brass, has an early spoon shape on one end and 3-tined fork on the other. When I asked, he said he had documented it as 9th century Anglo-Saxon, and quoted me chapter and verse. Unfortunately, as I didn't have anything to write on...and my mind was a little toward the "pudding" stage at that point so I can't remember what he said, I don't remember where the "chapter and verse" came from. Any thoughts???? Kiri Date: Mon, 17 Apr 2000 15:46:13 EDT From: RuddR at aol.com Subject: Re: SC - Plastic Ware (change to Forks??) Kiri writes, > Oh goodie....another thread, sort of. I ran into something Saturday at the > event I cooked, that I thought you all might like ti "chew on". One of our > metal workers, and a very talented one who does serious research, I might > add, was selling a thing that I christened a "spork". it is brass, has an early > spoon shape on one end and 3-tined fork on the other. When I asked, he said > he had documented it as 9th century Anglo-Saxon, and quoted me chapter and verse. > Unfortunately, as I didn't have anything to write on...and my mind was a > little > toward the "pudding" stage at that point so I can't remember what he said, I > don't remember where the "chapter and verse" came from. Any thoughts??? _European Spoons Before 1700_, by John Emery, John Donald Publishing, Ltd, 1976. P.63 (Northern Europe): "Of slightly later date are two unfinished combined spoons and forks from a hoard of coins and silver scrap dug up at Sevington in Wiltshire and dated about A. D. 850. . . .the earliest appearance of a definite two-pronged fork [in Northern Europe]. . . ." Rudd Rayfield Date: Sat, 6 May 2000 19:04:43 -0700 From: "Wanda Pease" Subject: RE: SC - Quinces (and a query about an eating utensil) > On a completely different subject, does anyone remember an eating utensil > which was mentioned on the List a few weeks ago? It was a spoon on one end > and a 3 tined fork on the other. The poster said that she (I think) had > seen it at an event and had been assured by its owner that it was a > documentable Anglo-Saxon design. If anyone can give me further information > on this, I would greatly appreciate it. I have a book: _The Gold, Silver and Other Non-Ferrous Alloy Objects from Hamwic: The Southampton Finds Volume Two_ by David A. Hinton ISBN: 0-7509-1167-0. On page 57 it shows several spoon/forks. They are pointy spoon bowls (rather like a grapefruit spoon) with a two tine fork on the other end. These are definitely not forks for holding something down while carving it. They remind me a bit of a fork for getting pickles or olives out of the bottle. The introduction to the monograph states that most of the finds date from between 700-850 CE. It also states that: "A silver 'spoon ' and 'fork' combination, and a silver double spoon were in the Sevington hoard, with coins of c. 850 (Wilson 1964, nos 67 and 68)." Date: Fri, 16 Jun 2000 10:01:36 EDT From: RuddR at aol.com Subject: SC - Re: Trenchers Request Elianora Mathewes writes: > I'm looking for images of a particular type of wooden > trencher used in the 16th century: the primary characteristic > of the type is that it has poetry or Biblical quotations and > painted decorations on the bottom; the top should be of plain > wood. It was used for serving fruit, and is sometimes > referred to as a "roundel." > > If you could refer me to specific books or even a museum > website with pictures of this sort of trencher, I'd be very grateful. There is a fine picture by Georg Flegel, German, ca. 1600s showing lots of goodies a stack of roundels, glasses and plates, some spoons and a nice knife, at: http://sunsite.auc.dk/cgfa/f/p-flegel3.htm Rudd Rayfield Date: Sat, 11 Nov 2000 19:47:09 -0500 From: Angie Malone Subject: SC - Platina and setting a table I am probably losing my mind with less than a week to go before I cook the feast, but I have gotten interested in what tables settings were like and even interested in napkin folding but I am digressing. : - ) In Platina it says in Book I section 12 On setting a table: One must set a table according to the time of year; in winter, in enclosed and warm places, in summer, in cool and open places. In spring, flowers are arranged in the dining room and onthe table; in winter, the air should be redolent with perfumes; in summer, the floor should be stewn with fragrant boughs of trees, of vine and of willow, which freshen the dining room, in autumn, let the ripe grapes, pears and apples hang from the ceiling. Napkins should be white and the tablecloths spotless, because, if they were otherwise, they should arouse squeamishness and take away the desire to eat. Let a servant scrub the knives andd sharpen their edges so that diners will not be delayed by dullness of iron. The rest of the dishes should be scrubbed clean, whether they are earthen or silver, for this meticulous care arouses even a sluggish appetite. === My question is this, if I was to assume that we are now in winter, what kind of perfumes would we be putting in the air? Angeline Date: Sat, 11 Nov 2000 18:28:05 -0700 From: Serian Subject: Re: SC - Platina and setting a table > My question is this, if I was to assume that we are now in winter, what > kind of perfumes would we be putting in the air? > > Angeline My guess would be things like balsam, cedar, frankincense, that sort of thing - woody things. Serian Date: Mon, 13 Nov 2000 13:24:09 -0600 From: "Decker, Terry D." Subject: RE: SC - Trenchers Oh my! Apparently the broken and damaged dishes were most often replaced before Lent and Easter and Christmas and Epiphany when the households expected host the greatest number of guests and personages of rank, so the house would be displayed at its best. Bear > >Ceramic bowls were replenished once or twice a year, just before the high > >Holy Days. > > This piqued my curiosity. Could you explain this bit please? Was > there a reason this particular time? > > Iasmin Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2000 21:32:20 -0500 From: rmhowe To: medieval-leather at egroups.com Subject: Re: [medieval-leather] In regards to Esther Cameron's Leather Scabbard Thesis Moore, Simon: Cutlery for the Table / A History of British Table and Pocket Cutlery 1999 The Hallamshire Press, Broom Hall, Sheffield S10 DR England Amazon.UK ISBN 1874718563 320 pp. 35.00 GBP, Shipping 4.95 GBP Total: 39.95 GBP total. Magnus, who does full citations so people can find the damn things. Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 12:16:56 -0500 (EST) From: Jenne Heise Subject: SC - Eating Utensils website Reviewed in LIIWEEK: The History of Eating Utensils - http://www.calacademy.org/research/anthropology/utensil/ Learn about the history of common eating utensils. This site covers knives, forks, spoons, chopsticks, and portable cutlery. Includes graphics and a bibliography. See also A History of Eating Utensils in the West: A Brief Timeline. From the Rietz Food Technology Collection in the Anthropology Department at the California Academy of Sciences. - -- Jadwiga Zajaczkowa, mka Jennifer Heise jenne at mail.browser.net Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 10:26:46 -0800 From: david friedman Subject: Re: SC - Eating Utensils website >Reviewed in LIIWEEK: > >The History of Eating Utensils - > http://www.calacademy.org/research/anthropology/utensil/ > Learn about the history of common eating utensils. This > site covers knives, forks, spoons, chopsticks, and > portable cutlery. Includes graphics and a bibliography. > See also A History of Eating Utensils in the West: A > Brief Timeline. From the Rietz Food Technology > Collection in the Anthropology Department at the > California Academy of Sciences. >-- >Jadwiga Zajaczkowa, mka Jennifer Heise jenne at mail.browser.net Unfortunately, it isn't very reliable. Under forks, they have: An Englishman named Thomas Coryate brought the first forks back to England after seeing them in Italy during his travels in 1608. - -- David Friedman ddfr at best.com Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 13:04:49 -0600 From: "Decker, Terry D." Subject: RE: SC - Eating Utensils website I believe someone on the list commented that the earliest forks known in England are from the excavations of Danish York, however nothing is known about how they were used. For a short, but interesting piece on forks quoting Coryate, try: http://www.byu.edu/ipt/projects/middleages/LifeTimes/TableFork.html Bear Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 16:48:47 -0600 From: "Decker, Terry D." Subject: RE: SC - Eating Utensils website Try these: Bailey, C.T.P. Knives and Forks. London: The Medici Society, 1927. Boger, Ann. Consuming Passions: The Art of Food and Drink. Cleveland: Cleveland Museum of Art, 1983. Flanagan, Laurence. Ireland's Armada Legacy. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1988. Giblin, James Cross. From Hand to Mouth. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1987. Gruber, Alain. Silverware. New York: Rizzoli International Publications, Inc., 1982. Harrison, Molly. The Kitchen in History. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1972. Hayward, J.F. English Cutlery, sixteenth to eighteenth century. London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1956. Henisch, Bridget Ann. Fast and Feast, Food in Medieval Society. University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1976. Millikin, William M. "Early Christian Fork and Spoon", The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art, 44(Oct. 1957), 185+. Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 16:33:56 -0800 To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org From: "Laura C. Minnick" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Tableware >Really? Much of my research indicates that in 12th century England and >France, they rarely used plates, but used trenchers instead, and that that >practice carried over for well over a century afterwards. Certainly there >are trenchers shown in, among other places, the feasting scenes of the Duc de >Berry's book of hours, which is 14th century, I believe, and depicts banquets >served for nobles. >Certainly there is metalware (mostly utensils and covered hanaps or drinking >vessels) depicted on the tables, but I don't recall seeing plates that >frequently for personal eating. Certainly they appear as serving utensils. > >Brangwayna Morgan This is true- I did some seminar work on it. There is usually very little on the tables, until VERY late. And- *rummage rummage rummage* I just found in a box here in my room (along with one of the awfulest papers I ever wrote- it got an undeserved A-) the 34-page bunch of illos that went with the seminar paper! Wahoo! It's not in Dad's garage! Ok- what have we here (I will just cite a few examples)... Oh- HEY! Someone was asking the other day about group handwashing? Found the picture- the one with the 'kiddie pools'- from: _Prose Tristan_, Italian, ca. 1320-50 (Bibliotheque Nationale, MS. Fr. 755, fol.115). It is figure 31 in Henisch's _Fast and Feast_, but I don't have a page number. Tableware- St.Louis feeding the poor- (BN, MS. Fr. 5716, fol.213) 13th c- there are large serving dishes, a few bowls, a salt cellar, a goblet, two knives, assorted bread bits and sops. a Life of Christ (BN, MS. Ital. 115, fol. 79v) 14th c.- manchets, cups, knives, large serving platters, and some bowls. Judith- (Winchester Bible, f. 331V)- 12thc.- Serving dishes, two salt cellars, and knives. >From _Old Testament Miniatures_ (Maciejowski Bibile, Morgan, fol. 16 recto)- 13th c.- Serving bowls, drinking bowls, knives, misc. bread (and a servant cutting what looks like trencher), teh salt, and a ewer. A 14th c text of Arthur and the Round Table (I don't have the cite- sorry) shows a rounded horseshoe table, with a fringed cloth, and serving dishes, knives, drinking cups, and manchets. A 13th c _Parzival_ (again, no cite) shows the cloth with elaborate folds in the front, the scrolly name-tag things on important people, and salts, serving dishes, and scored bread/manchets. January, _Tres Riches Heures_ (early 15th c, BTW) shows a variety of food prep going on on the table, assorted serving dishes, a couple of bowls, an enourmous nef, and two Taco Bell-size dogs. Gorgeous tablecloth too. Luttrel Psalter, f. 208- Serving dishes, knives, cups and bowls, two spoons, and assorted bread. Servant in front has the appropiate towel- one of the earlier depictions of the fringed towel. >From Queen Mary's Psalter (British Museum, MS. Royal 2B. VII, fol. 199v.) Serving dishes, a knife, a salt, two ewers, bread, and sops. Also from the _Life of Christ_ (BN, MS. Ital. 115, fol. 71v.) Jesus is being fed in the desert- and the angels lay out a lovely picnic lunch, complete with tablecloth over a rock, and two angels to do teh handwashing! On the tablecloth- a serving platter, a cup, two manchets, and a ewer. Fairly late, from the Coronation of Ann of Brittany (_the Banquet_, fol. 54v.) Lots of serving plates, but there appears to be a few individual platters on the table. But I would not want my servers wearing such big sleeves! I personally have been paring down- trying to think in terms of how Elaine would have eaten in 1402, and finding that it changes how I think about food. I usually have- a small wooden plate (stand in for a trencher, which we seldom have and I usually don't have time to bake and then drive several hours), a small bowl, my stubby brass cup (short-footed, or I would call it a chalice), a spoon for soup, and one of my serving towels as a napkin. A knife if I remember, but usually I have to borrow from Edouard- which is actually a more period thing to do. Mostly, I eat with my fingers. Bits of bread for sauces are nice. But you know, eating that way greatly increases my understanding of the manners texts- you know, about not wiping you hands on the pets, or the tablecloth, and wiping your mouth so you don't leave food grease in a shared cup... Yup. Nuthin quite like trying it their way to understand what they're doing... 'Lainie From: "Mercy Neumark" To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Date: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 08:34:24 -0800 Subject: [Sca-cooks] re: english and french pottery was re: tableware >I just don't think I can support it being used as plates/trenchers to >eat >off of, that's all. Nor can I support wood or metal for the same >purpose. >They don't appear in teh pictures, nor in inventories, etc. But when >they >finally appear in very late period, the majority seem to be metal, and >'plate' was a popular thing to pawn if you got into difficulties. I have pictures from the J.Paul Getty Museum of plates from 1275 and onwards, which were used to eat off of on a daily basis and not as serving dishes (I do have pictures of serving dishes too). I can scan the sketches of plates that were found in England as well if it would help. I also have "Three Books of the Potter" by Picilopasso (misspelling his name horribly) that was written roughly 1535 that goes over not only the production of pottery, but examples of pottery this gentleman made/saw. While this is later period, the pottery he was using in Umbria, I believe, was in business for a LONG time before that (maiolica potteries began to crop up in Italy in 11th century and began closing down in the 17ish-18th centuries). I'll try to find some painting showing plates because I am pretty certain that I've seen something. Flemish Still lifes come to mind, but I could very easily be wrong. I'll delve deeper into this an report later. :) --Arte the pottery sleuth Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2002 10:32:15 -0700 To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org From: lilinah at mail.earthlink.net Subject: [Sca-cooks] 12th C. Persian Folding Spoon-Fork Well, i mentioned this 12th C. Persian folding silver spoon-fork on list at least a month ago - i finally got around to scanning it and posting it on my website. If you want to take a look at this unusual item: http://witch.drak.net/lilinah/Persian_Spork.html No, it isn't really a spork, but it saves typing time :-) Taking a wild guess, it could be for eating sweetmeats without getting one's fingers sticky... it's rather small - the spoon bowl is small and flat - and the fork is rather short... I've sent the picture for estimates to the two metalworkers recommended by folks on the list who contacted me. Anahita lilinah at earthlink.net Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2005 05:17:26 -0800 (PST) From: Louise Smithson Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: heraldry & ceramics (morgana.abbey at juno.com) To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Morgana wrote: A friend of mine has a 14th century French persona. She is curious if heraldry was put on tableware and if so, how was it placed? Did they underglaze it on the rim of the plates, put it underneath? Did they do that tacky Nancy Reagan-White House china thing? Any ideas? Morgana, I have seen arms on at least plates but it is on Italian Majolica from the 15th and 16th century. There are lots of pictures of Majolica on the web all you have to do is google. The Italians were inspired by the spanish. The spanish decorated ceramics is called hispano-moresque ware (and occured a little ealier). The spanish in turn stole this technique from the arabs, early arabic tin ware. The one thing that all these ceramics have in common is that the background is a white tin glaze, which is then painted on with stains and chemicals, this is then fired and the colors become brilliant on a smooth white background. The process is technically very difficult, consequently pieces were expensive and in period these decorated plates were ostentatious displays of wealth. Many of the examples in the museums worldwide show no sign of use whatsoever. They were too expensive to eat off, they were displayed in wooden cases. In addition the 14th century is just too early for most of this ware, it had not spread to Europe yet, and the arabic ceramics were much more abstract. I don't have too many books on the pottery from france for the 14th century but I know that they were responsible for importing cooking pots into England for sale there as well as the ever popular Rouen drinking jugs. See the Museum of London for some examples of imported ceramics. http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/ceramics/pages/object.asp?obj_id=34537 Fairly common to France was slip decorated ware. White or cream/grey clay body, colored slips in a pattern on the outside and finally a clear lead glaze. Hope this helps, but what she wants isn't really appropriate to persona or period. Sorry. Helewyse Cook and potter :-) Date: Tue, 01 Feb 2005 09:29:47 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Re: heraldry & ceramics To: Cooks within the SCA > Morgana wrote: A friend of mine has a 14th century French persona. She > is curious if heraldry was put on tableware and if so, how was it > placed? Did they underglaze it on the rim of the plates, put it > underneath? Did they do that tacky Nancy Reagan-White House china > thing? Any ideas? If you check through the V&A Access to Images you can find a number of items that show coats of arms. There's 17th century earthenware for instance that is quite splendid. There are several pieces of that in fact. There are also brass and copper plates with coats of arms. But I didn't locate anything that is 14th century tableware. Your friend might consider glassware with coats of arms. See Goblet and case Title The Luck of Edenhall Date 13th century (Case) 14th century The glassware is Mideastern but the case is French or English. It's also early enough. The description goes into the nobles buying items in an international market. So someone in France might have purchased Italian glassware for instance. There are a number of German glasses in the V&A with coats of arms but they are 16th century and later. http://www.vam.ac.uk/ The British Museum online has this object up. http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/compass The Aldrevandini Beaker Venice, around AD 1330 The Aldrevandini beaker is a uniquely well-preserved example from a group of glass vessels produced in Venice at the end of the thirteenth and the beginning of the fourteenth century. Beneath the inscription are three heraldic shields set against a background of leaves. Two of the shields are yellow, one decorated with three blue stags' horns and the other with red keys. The third consists of black and white horizontal bars. This combination of three different shields suggests that the heraldry is purely decorative and that the beaker was not produced for a specific person or family. There are also a number of 16th century Maiolica dishes such as that From Deruta, Umbria, Italy, around AD 1490-1525 which feature coats of arms. Johnnae Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2005 10:42:13 -0500 From: "Elise Fleming" Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: Heraldry & Ceramics To: "ca-cooks at ansteorra.org" Greetings. The Cleveland Museum of Art has some examples. In one of the books I have, there's a picture of "lusterware plate with the name of 'Maria'" which also includes what looks to be some armorial design. This is earthen ware, tin glazed with golden lustre decoration, 46.2 cm. diameter, made in Spain, in the second or third decade of the 15th century around Valencia. "Large ornamental plates in this style became so renowned that personalized examples were ordered not only from the four corners of Spain but also from as far as Italy and France, with the prominent inclusion of the arms of the owne to be." There are also several examples of Maiolica Plate with portraits in the center. This is earthenware, tin-glazed again. You noted that your friend's persona is from the 1300s (14th c.) in France. The Museum's material is about 100 years later (1420, 1430). You might want to check to see if lusterware, maiolica or tin-glazed ware was made as early as the 1300s. (Found a lovely pitcher painted in "The Merode Altarpiece, Annunciation" done by Robert Campin (the Master of Flemalle), 1400s. While no arms are on it, there are words on the glazed pitcher.) Alys Katharine Date: Fri, 20 May 2005 08:43:54 -0700 (PDT) From: "Colleen McDonald" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Documentation for Presentation To: "Cooks within the SCA" When I entered my Condoignac from Le Mesnagier in our Kingdom A&S competition in 2004, I documented my table setting and service in an appendix to the main documentation. Here's a quick listing of the details. For the handwashing at the beginning of the entry, I used this recipe from Powers' translation of Le Menagier (The Goodman of Paris): "To prepare water for washing the hands at the table. Set sage to boil, then pour over the water and let it cool until it is just warm". (Powers 299) I documented my white table coverings using Powers' translation (page 242) and pictures from the Queen Mary Psalter and Giotto's The Marriage at Cana. My judges had individual bread trenchers, based on this passage from Powers' (page 242): "Item, two knife-bearers, whereof one is to cut up bread and make trenchers and salt-cellars of bread and they shall carry the salt and the bread and the trenchers to the tables." I used pewter plates for serving dishes in line with what _The Goodman_ directs his young wife to use for a wedding dinner (Powers 243). "And he shall likewise purvey the pewter vessels; to wit ten dozen bowls, six dozen small dishes, two dozen and a half large dishes, eight quart [pots], two dozen pint [pots], two almsdishes." My judges were provided with spoons and ewers (Powers 243): "Two other esquires be needed for the service of the dining hall, and they shall give out spoons and collect them again,..." "The office of the steward is to purvey saltcellars for the high table; hanaps, four dozen; covered gilt goblets, four; ewers, six; silver spoons, four dozen; silver quart [pots], four; ...." My sweetheart and a close friend worked as the servers for my entry following the directions given in _The Goodman_ (Powers 243): "Two other esquires be needed for the service of the dining hall, and they shall give out spoons and collect them again, give out hanaps, pour out whichsoever wine be asked for by the guests at table and collect the vessels again." I served the condoignac with an option of bread or wafers (water crackers as I had completely run out of time to make my own) and a French Burgundy wine, the choice of which was documented in the body of my paper. I actually considered getting a Burgundy from Clos de Vougeot, since that vineyard has been in existence since the 1300's, but at $60 plus a bottle, decided it was too expensive. All in all, it was fun to present and even though the judges didn't seem to notice the presentation, I was glad I made the effort. Cainder Date: Mon, 26 Sep 2005 19:47:00 -0700 From: lilinah at earthlink.net Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] trenchers To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Aoghann wrote: > I have heard this before, and it amazes me. When did precious metals and > fine porcelain start being used in table service? (or restart, as the > case may be) Fine china (not always porcelain) and silver and bronze/brass were staples on Near and Middle Eastern tables. The Persians also imported celadon ware and blue-and-white wear (often porcelain) from China for hundreds of years in SCA period. And don't forget glass. The use of glass began in either Ancient Mesopotamia or Ancient Phoenicia, and seems never to have ceased to be used in the Near and Middle East. I don't know about glass in al-Andalus, but fine china and fine metals were on the dining table since early on - al-Andalus, Muslim Spain, began around 711 and didn't cease to be until 1492. -- Urtatim (that's err-tah-TEEM) the persona formerly known as Anahita Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Knives - sharp side in? To: Cooks within the SCA Message-ID: <200511110804.06238.carlton_bach at yahoo.de> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Am Freitag, 11. November 2005 04:38 schrieb kingstaste at mindspring.com: > I was getting ready for a class tonight at Viking, and the Class > Manager > had set the table. The Culinary School Manager came in and asked > him if he > had taken Dining Room in culinary school yet, and proceeded to > correct his > table setting. In the process, I heard "in the middle ages they > put it > that way to assure the other person you wouldn't stab them". > "What?" says > I. He repeated: "the practice of placing the edge of the knife > facing in > towards the plate dates from the Middle Ages, and it was meant to > reassure > your dining partner that you were not going to slice or stab > them". He > said he was taught this in Culinary History at Johnson and Wales. > I said > that I had never run across that particular one in all of the dining > etiquette books I had read from the Middle Ages and Renaissance. I > thought > I would run it by here - anyone heard of this one? Heard, yes, but I believe the concern over the health of fellow diners goes back to the Early Modern period, rather. After all, it is in the seventeenth centuries that table knives lose their stabbing point. From all depictions I recall, medieval table settings even in the wealthier households were not governed by any such rules until very late. Most interestingly, what you most commonly see is a single knife lying on the table that seems to be for communal use. We can assume the diners also brought their own smaller ones, but these are not usually visible (IIRC Tannhäuser suggests putting it away when not using it). Why would I want to stab anyone at the dinner table in a society where it is still legal to kill people in open hand-to-hand combat? Giano Date: Fri, 11 Nov 2005 19:08:42 -0500 From: Daniel Myers Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Knives - sharp side in? To: Cooks within the SCA On Nov 11, 2005, at 12:37 AM, Pat wrote: > ISR that during most of the middle ages, one brought one's own > table settings to table and laid them out however one wished. The Book of Kerving (Wynkin de Worde) has the butler laying out the place settings for the master & guests, with the master having a knife and spoon, and the guests just having spoons. He makes no mention of which way the knife is to face. - Doc Date: Tue, 27 Jun 2006 08:43:55 -0400 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: [Sca-cooks] Feeding Desire-- the book To: SCA COOKS If anyone is interested in silverware or tableware, they may want to take a look at the very expensive very beautiful volume Feeding Desire. It's the catalogue to the Cooper Hewitt show in NYC. http://www.cooperhewitt.org/EXHIBITIONS/feeding_desire/ The hardcover is 288 pages with 200 color illustrations. It's $65. Amazon has it priced at just over $40. Johnnae ?? ?? ?? ?? Edited by Mark S. Harris p-tableware-msg Page 28 of 28