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    Food in Medieval England: Diet and Nutrition

    £53.10
    £59.00
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9780199563357
    Products specifications
    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorWoolgar, C. M. (Reader and Head of Speci
    Pub Date21/05/2009
    BindingPaperback
    Pages368
    Publisher: O.U.P.
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    Food in Medieval England draws on the latest research to present the most up-to-date picture of English diet from the early Saxon period up to c.1540. It examines a wide range of sources, from the historical records of medieval farms, abbeys, and households, to animal bones, human remains, and plants from archaeological sites.

    Food and diet are central to understanding daily life in the middle ages. In the last two decades, the potential for the study of diet in medieval England has changed markedly: historians have addressed sources in new ways; material from a wide range of sites has been processed by zooarchaeologists and archaeobotanists; and scientific techniques, newly applied to the medieval period, are opening up possibilities for understanding the cumulative effects of diet on the
    skeleton. In a multi-disciplinary approach to the subject, this volume, written by leading experts in different fields, unites analysis of the historical, archaeological, and scientific record to provide an up-to-date synthesis. The volume covers the whole of the middle ages from the early Saxon
    period up to c .1540, and while the focus is on England wider European developments are not ignored.

    The first aim of the book is to establish how much more is now known about patterns of diet, nutrition, and the use of food in display and social competition; its second is to promote interchange between the methodological approaches of historians and archaeologists. The text brings together much original research, marrying historical and archaeological approaches with analysis from a range of archaeological disciplines, including archaeobotany, archaeozoology, osteoarchaeology, and isotopic
    studies.