Food: A Cultural Culinary History

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Lecture 18: 16

th-Century Manners and Reformation Diets


 Another important factor in this increasingly court-dominated
society is that the general trend in most of the European powers is
for the monarchy to grow in power at the expense of the nobility.
In the 16th century, there is not only centralization, but also growth
of the physical territory of the crown; there is no longer a maze of
independent powers, but a true nation-state.

 Anyone who wants power now has to go through the king. He
becomes the font of patronage, the person who appoints government
positions as well as church positions. Therefore, more than ever,
kings set fashions. The result is a dazzling court culture that trickles
down from nobles to gentry to wealthy bourgeois businessmen and
professionals—and even to wealthy yeoman farmers.

 Almost immediately, we see the level of material culture take a
great leap forward. People with expendable income want to show
off their wealth—fl aunt it a bit—and now there’s some great stuff
to buy.

 One way to look at the plight of the poor, starving masses might
be to consider that for all the wealth that’s accumulating at the
upper end of the social scale, someone else is going hungry. Lots of
people, low wages, and high prices mean that the diet of the average
European becomes dramatically worse, and it becomes glaringly
obvious that eating customs come to be increasingly associated
with class.

The Reformations
 There’s another very important series of events that has a profound
effect on eating habits across Europe: the Protestant, Catholic,
and Radical Reformations. All of these were very important for
understanding attitudes toward food in the modern era.

 At the start of the early modern period, there was mounting a
considerable reaction to what were considered abuses of the
medieval church. Most of all, it was wealth and profl igacy, but it
was also the failure of priests to live up to their vows of chastity,
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