Darrera modificació: 2017-12-04 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Martin, Daphne J., "Fish consumption in a medieval English bishop's household, 1406-7", Aqua: Journal of Ichthyology and Aquatic Biology, 5/2 (2002), 81-88.
- Resum
- The accounts of a fifteenth-century English bishop give details of the fish eaten in his Wiltshire household on meatless days, comprising twenty-five species of fish, and seven types of crustaceans and gastropods. This reflects the advances in ship building and fishing methods. The servants were fed imported smoked and pickled North Sea herring, and salted and dried Icelandic cod, supplied by the Hanseatic league of German ports. The bishop, his guests and household officials ate a variety of fresh marine and freshwater species, caught in the English Channel and Severn estuary and in local rivers. The daily fish ration was 0.5-1 kg and the total annual cost of the fish was nearly 5 % of the bishop's income.
- Matèries
- Alimentació
Cuina i confiteria
- URL
- http://www.aqua-aquapress.com/pdf/5(2)_Fish%20Consu ...
|