ABSTRACT

This book offers a study of what and how people ate in the Iberian Peninsula between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries.

It has long been recognized that Mediterranean cultures attach great importance to communal meals and food cooked with great refinement. However, whilst medieval feasting in England, France and Italy has been thoroughly studied, Spain and Portugal have both been somewhat neglected in this area of study. This volume analyses how medieval men of the Iberian Peninsula questioned themselves about different aspects deemed important in social feasting. It investigates the acquisition of table manners and rhetorical skills, the interaction between medicine and eating, and the presence of food in literature and religion. The book also shows how this shared society and culture, as well as their attitude towards food, connected them to a Western European tradition.

The book will appeal to scholars and students alike interested in food and feasting from the perspectives of literature, history, language, art, religion and medicine, and to those interested in a social, cultural and literary overview of life in the Iberian Peninsula during the late Middle Ages.

chapter 1|47 pages

How should I eat before a king?

Feasts as public display of moral manners

chapter 2|19 pages

Rhetoric as a social virtue

Holding conversations when eating in public

chapter 3|20 pages

The theory of humours applied to food in the Middle Ages

From the Graeco-Roman tradition to mediaeval Latin Europe

chapter 4|41 pages

Biblical feasts in the thirteenth century

Miniatures in the Bibles historiales

chapter 5|21 pages

A caution against excess

Gula in John Gower's works

chapter 6|17 pages

Eating with the lords of Portugal

Continuities and discontinuities from the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries

chapter 7|18 pages

Imagining the meal of a crusader

Food, feasting and fasting in Baudouin de Sebourc

chapter 8|24 pages

Don Juan Manuel and food

Eating and didacticism. Mirrors of princes, regiments of health and treatises on the virtues and vices in the world view of a fourteenth-century Castilian aristocrat

chapter 10|33 pages

Religious context and eating in late Middle Ages castile

Aubergines as a conflict between Jews, Muslims, and Christians

chapter 11|21 pages

Food in popular culture

Wording, practice and symbolic aspects in Castilian proverb collections