Difference between revisions of "Spoons"

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Revision as of 20:17, 3 December 2013


More Crafts pages

Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 1 out of 5. Article planned for future work. No real progress to date.
Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 1 out of 5. Article planned for future work. No real progress to date.

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]
Cattle or horse bones were mainly used to make bone spoons. [MacGREGOR 1985:p.181]. Viking used antler as well as bone and their spoons are characterised by large well-defined bowls and flat often decorated handles [MacGREGOR 1985:p.182]

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

Recreation Guide
800-899 900-979 980-1040 1041-1100
Encouraged

Art
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Literature
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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, Flixborough. 1 bone spoon with 'knop' terminal mid C8th to early C9th [FOREMAN 2009:p.231].

Discussion
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Double Spoons

Art
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Literature
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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
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Small Toilet Spoons

Art
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Literature
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Archaeology

  • England, York. 1 possible toilet spoon made from copper alloy [MAINMAN and ROGERS 2000:p.2547 Cat. 10365].

Discussion
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Spoon with Spatula

Art
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Literature
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Archaeology

Discussion
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Spatula with Fork

Art
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Literature
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Archaeology

  • England, Sevington Hoard. Spatula with a 2 prong fork made from silver. [WILSON 1964:cat.68]

Discussion
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References

<nocite> FOREMAN2009 GRAHAM-CAMPBELL1980 MacGREGOR1999 MAINMAN2000 MORRIS2000 OTTAWAY1992 ROESDAHL1981 WILSON1964 </nocite> <biblio force=false>#Template:Bib</biblio>