Anton Ervynck and Wim Van Neer (2017)
Beef, pork and mutton. An archaeological survey of the meat consumption in medieval and postmedieval towns in the southern Low Countries (Flanders & Brussels, Belgium)
Quaternary International .
A survey is presented of archaeozoological information from medieval and postmedieval towns in the
southern Low Countries (the present regions of Flanders and Brussels, in Belgium). Diachronic changes in
the consumption of the three main domestic meat-suppliers (cattle, pig, sheep) in nine towns are
investigated, and trends are compared among these towns. At the same time, possible geographical
differences in meat consumption are traced. The observed differences in time and space are then
explained as part of the economics of animal husbandry and of the interaction between town and
countryside. From a methodological standpoint, this survey demonstrates that in a number of cases,
information from archaeozoological contexts with varying depositional histories, often reflecting
different socio-economic strata, can be combined to obtain a picture of meat consumption, and thus of
the town's food provisioning, through time.
Peer Review, International Redaction Board, Impact Factor
Most recent IF: 2.07
- DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2017.
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