Volume 167, 5 June 2015, Pages 47–53
Potent Substances: On the Boundaries of Food and Medicine
Health, wellness and the allure of spices in the Middle Ages
Abstract
Ethnopharmocological relevance
During
the European Middle Ages aromatic products imported from Asia and
Africa were credited with both preventive and curative medical
properties. In addition spices provided an image of wellness and as they
were expensive and had many uses in cuisine and fragrance, they
functioned as prestige consumer goods.
Materials and methods
This
is an effort to look historically at a social and cultural phenomenon
for the period roughly A.D. 1200–1500. Sources of information about the
demand for and uses of spices include lists of materia medica, medical
treatises, cookbooks, religious writings, descriptions of banquets and
court ceremonial and literary works showing what might be called
aspirational lifestyles.
Results
It
is important to focus on the demand side of the spice trade rather than
simply assuming a consistent demand and looking only at the supply
(prices, routes, for example).
Conclusions
The
demand for spices must be understood in terms of their attributed
medical and wellness powers, but these in turn are related to the
mysterious Eastern origins of spices that enhanced their image as elite
consumer products and their association with spiritual as well as
medical healing.
Keywords
- Traditional medicine, Europe, Mediterranean, Near East;
- Transport;
- Theories of illness;
- Historical sources;
- Cosmetics
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