Difference between revisions of "Spoons"
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** Benden. 1 wooden spoon [MORRIS 2000:p.2267 Cat.9234]. | ** Benden. 1 wooden spoon [MORRIS 2000:p.2267 Cat.9234]. | ||
** Coppergate. wooden spoons [MORRIS 2000:p.2267 Cat.9985, 8896, 8899, 8898]. 1 bone spoon (bowl only) [MacGREGOR, MAINMAN and ROGERS 1999:Cat.7062]. | ** Coppergate. wooden spoons [MORRIS 2000:p.2267 Cat.9985, 8896, 8899, 8898]. 1 bone spoon (bowl only) [MacGREGOR, MAINMAN and ROGERS 1999:Cat.7062]. | ||
+ | * England, [[S-S#Flixborough|Flixborough]. 1 bone spoon with 'knop' terminal mid C8th to early C9th [OTTAWAY 2009:p.231]. | ||
|Discussion | |Discussion | ||
Spoons would have been the primary eating utensil after the knife [Morris 2000:p.2267] | Spoons would have been the primary eating utensil after the knife [Morris 2000:p.2267] | ||
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MAINMAN2000 | MAINMAN2000 | ||
MORRIS2000 | MORRIS2000 | ||
+ | OTTAWAY1992 | ||
+ | OTTAWAY2009 | ||
ROESDAHL1981 | ROESDAHL1981 | ||
WILSON1964 | WILSON1964 |
Revision as of 09:37, 27 August 2012
Spoons |
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Introduction
Finds of wooden spoons were non existent until the two decorated examples from the Clifford Street excavation in York were found in the 1950's. Now we have a number of examples including a large number from Novgorod, Russia. [MORRIS 2000:p.2267]. Some wooden spoons would have been home made but others show signs of possibly being made in specialist workshops [MORRIS 2000:p.2268].
Spoons would have served a number of uses from day-to-day eating utensils to small Roman style toilet spoons used for removing ear wax or possibly measuring out cosmetics [MAINMAN and ROGERS 2000:p.2547]
Normal Spoons
A spoon with a shallow bowl and a handle.
Note: Included in this type are archaeological finds of spoons where only the bowl and possibly part of the handle has survived
800-899 | 900-979 | 980-1040 | 1041-1100 |
Encouraged |
{{Evidence |Art |Literature |Archaeology =
- England, York.
- Clifford Street. 2 wooden spoons with flat handles both of which had decorated handles [ROESDAHL 1981:p.110 Cat.YDL11, YDL12. Note that the illustrations are numbered incorrectly]
- Benden. 1 wooden spoon [MORRIS 2000:p.2267 Cat.9234].
- Coppergate. wooden spoons [MORRIS 2000:p.2267 Cat.9985, 8896, 8899, 8898]. 1 bone spoon (bowl only) [MacGREGOR, MAINMAN and ROGERS 1999:Cat.7062].
- England, [[S-S#Flixborough|Flixborough]. 1 bone spoon with 'knop' terminal mid C8th to early C9th [OTTAWAY 2009:p.231].
|Discussion Spoons would have been the primary eating utensil after the knife [Morris 2000:p.2267] }}
Double Spoons
Art
--
Literature
--
Archaeology
- England, York. Coppergate. 1 made from bone [MacGREGOR, MAINMAN and ROGERS 1999:p.1972 Cat.7063], 1 made from copper alloy [MAINMAN and ROGERS 2000:Cat. 10366].
Discussion
--
Small Toilet Spoons
Art
--
Literature
--
Archaeology
- England, York. 1 possible toilet spoon made from copper alloy [MAINMAN and ROGERS 2000:p.2547 Cat. 10365].
Discussion
--
Spoon with Spatula
Art
--
Literature
--
Archaeology
- England, Sevington Hoard. 1 find made from silver. [WILSON 1964:cat.67]
Discussion
--
Spatula with Fork
Art
--
Literature
--
Archaeology
- England, Sevington Hoard. Spatula with a 2 prong fork made from silver. [WILSON 1964:cat.68]
Discussion
--
References
<nocite> MacGREGOR1999 MAINMAN2000 MORRIS2000 OTTAWAY1992 OTTAWAY2009 ROESDAHL1981 WILSON1964 </nocite> <biblio force=false>#Template:Bib</biblio>