Food: A Cultural Culinary History

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Lecture 13: Carnival in the High Middle Ages


Carnival in the High Middle Ages......................................................


Lecture 13

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fter the Dark Ages, Europe was pretty much in ruins, with the
sole exception of Spain under the rule of the Ummayad caliph of
Córdoba, which was a dazzling civilization with a sophisticated
Mediterranean cuisine linked fi rmly to the Middle East. The rest of Europe
was not only still suffering devastating famines, weak kings, and general
economic dislocation, but also a new wave of Germanic invasions in the 9th
and 10th centuries by a people from the north known as the Vikings. In this
lecture, you will learn how these invasions seriously disrupted Europe and
introduced a new foodway to the region.

Culinary Changes in Europe
 The Vikings invaded and conquered the British Isles and Normandy
in northern France, and the Normans in turn invaded England in


  1. Vikings also conquered Sicily, displacing the Arab rulers
    there. Another group called the Rus settled in Russia and traded
    as far as Constantinople and Baghdad. It is odd to think of Viking
    and Persian cultures coming in contact, but even in the earliest
    European cookbooks, there defi nitely was an infl uence.


 Returning to the Middle Ages, in the year 1000, everything
changed. The Vikings settled down, regular trade began to pick
up and intensify, and the population began to rise dramatically.
Cities began to grow again, sometimes right over the rubble of
Roman cities.

 One of the most compelling reasons for this dramatic change is a
serious shift in climate. Evidence proved that Europe was getting
signifi cantly warmer. Sudden grain surpluses suggested a longer
growing season, which led to people cultivating more land,
reclaiming it from the wild, and moving up mountainsides. This
growth in resources naturally stimulated population growth.
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