Twenty-eight bird briskets in a pot; roman preserved food form Nijmegen
Roel C.G.M. Lauwerier 

SUMMARY: In a military settlement in Roman Nijmegen, the Netherlands, a cork urn was found containing bird bones. A combination of archaeological, petrological and archaeozoological information leads to the conclusion that this cork urn had been used to trnsport a delicacy, preserved briskets of song thrushes, from the Ardennes or Eifel to Nijmegen. This find is a new indication that animal food products were imported from elsewhere. This find is also another link in the investigation of the function of cork urns, a type of pottery belonging to the group known as Galo-Belgic wares. Roman literary sources make clear that thrushes were a profitable delicacy and give indications for the possibility that these types of pots were sealed with pitch and gypsum to preserve their contents.

 

 

 


Volumen 2, Octubre 1993
LABORATORIO DE ARQUEOZOOLOGÍA
Volumen 2, Octubre 1993