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Nutrition in classical antiquity

Classical antiquity is the period of cultural history spanning from the 8th century BC to the beginning of the Middle Ages (which began around 500 AD). The major civilizations are those of the Mediterranean region, ancient Greece, ancient Rome, and southwest Asia. Nutrition consisted of simple fresh or preserved whole foods that were either locally grown or transported from neighboring areas during times of crisis. Physicians and philosophers studied the effect of food on the human body and they generally agreed that food was important in preventing illness and restoring health.

Three sea-perch and three limpets. Apulian red-figured fish plate, ca. 340–320 BC. British Museum

Food of antiquity edit

People ate various types of food; consumers had choices from dairy (milk and cheese), fruits (figs, pears, apples, and pomegranates), vegetables (greens and bulbs), grains and legumes (cereal, wheat barley, millet, beans, and chickpeas), and meat (beef, mutton, fowl, mussels, and oysters).[1][2] Food was most often fresh, but the processing of food aided in the preservation for long-term storage or transport to other cities. Cereals, olives, wine, legumes, vegetables, fruit, and animal products could all be processed and stored for later use.[3] Cereals were often processed and stored in the form of bread, flat-cakes, and porridge.[4] Legumes were also most often processed and stored as pulses and eaten with bread to enhance the flavor.[5] Cereals were most nourishing providing essential macro- and micronutrients to consumers.[6] Cereals sustained individuals with sufficient amounts of protein, vitamin B, vitamin E, calcium, and iron.[7] Fruits and vegetables provided vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin D, and half the dietary fiber needed for health support.[8]

Food shortage edit

Cities depended on trade with agricultural farmers and neighboring cities for food supply due to the lack of land cultivation area.[9][10] Food supply was altered by numerous events such as climate, location, and distribution.[11] Weather drastically affected the amount of produce harvested during a growing season. Climate often fluctuated in the Mediterranean region with varying temperatures and volumes of precipitation; these two factors also affected the quality of soil available to farmers.[12] Soil composition mainly depended on location, but the climate affected the moisture retained within the soil.[13] If the growing season was not prosperous then cities would have to resort to trade as a means for food supply. This often made food distribution difficult due to political disagreements and issues with transportation.[14] To combat hunger due to inadequate food supply people would eat twigs, roots of plants, bark from trees, and each other as a last resort.[15] Food shortages were frequent but did not last long enough to generate famine.

People of interest edit

 
Kapitolinischer Pythagoras sculpture

Pythagoras (570 BC – 495 BC) was a Greek philosopher, mathematician, and is also considered to be "the Father of Ethical Vegetarianism". He believed that in order to obtain the highest level of spiritual and physical health it was necessary to follow a lifestyle that included a vegetarian diet which excluded meats and other flesh foods.[16] Anaxagoras (500 BC – 428 BC) was also a Greek philosopher, he suggested that foods that we ate contained fragments that were needed for growth in the body. His belief was that "everything is in everything, at all times", physical characteristics (hair, nails, flesh, etc.) were generated from foods that contained those same substances.[17] Hippocrates (460 BC – 377 BC) was a physician known as the "father of medicine", his nutritional advice was based on the presence of the four humors in the body.[18] Plato (428/427 BC – 348/347 BC) was a Greek philosopher and mathematician; his idea of a healthy diet consisted of balance and moderation of cereals, fruits, vegetables, dairy, with a strong emphasis on the moderation of meat and wine.[19] His belief is that excess food from one source would lead to future ailments. Galen (129 AD – 216 AD) built much of his work by challenging the writings of others. He was an admirer of Hippocrates because of the work he had done in the field of medicine.[20] Galen believed that Hippocrates had stated all that needed to be known about nutrition, and he would interpret his work by the presentation of his own knowledge.[21]

Medicine edit

The humoral theory of medicine was central to medicine during antiquity and for centuries following. Physicians believed that the body contained a mixture of bodily fluids, the four humors: black bile, yellow bile, phlegm, and blood. They assessed a patient's degree of health based on the balance of these four bodily fluids. Diet was the first prescribed treatment of disease followed by drugs, then surgery.[22] Early physicians studied the different ways foods would affect the humors of the body by restoring health or causing disease. Utilizing knowledge about how humors were affected by diet physicians prescribed diets with balance, moderation, and timing in mind. Galen worked extensively on classifying foods according to how they interacted with the humors of the body.[23] Galen had also noted that some foods had drug characteristics and for that reason during food preparation it was not uncommon to boil those foods two or three times.[24]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.
  2. ^ Skiadas, P., & Lascaratos, J. (2001). Dietetics in ancient Greek philosophy: Plato's concepts of healthy diet. Published Online: 14 June 2001; | doi:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1601179, 55(7).
  3. ^ Thurmond, D. L. (2006). A handbook of food processing in classical Rome: For her bounty no winter(Technology and change in history, v. 9; Technology and change in history, v. 9). Leiden: Brill.
  4. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P.15
  5. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P.15
  6. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P.36
  7. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.
  8. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P.12
  9. ^ Garnsey, P., & Scheidel, W. (1998). Cities, peasants, and food in classical antiquity : Essays in social and economic history. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P.183
  10. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P. 29 - 33.
  11. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P. 34
  12. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P. 35
  13. ^ Thurmond, D. L. (2006). A handbook of food processing in classical Rome: For her bounty no winter(Technology and change in history, v. 9; Technology and change in history, v. 9). Leiden: Brill.
  14. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P. 35
  15. ^ Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. P. 37
  16. ^ Leitzmann C. (2014). Vegetarian nutrition: past, present, future. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 100, 496S-502S. doi:10.3945/ajcn.113.071365
  17. ^ Sisko, J. E. (2010). Anaxagoras on Matter, Motion, and Multiple Worlds. Philosophy Compass, 5(6), 443-454. doi:10.1111/j.1747-9991.2010.00313.x
  18. ^ Ullah, M. F., & Khan, M. W. (2008). Food as medicine: potential therapeutic tendencies of plant derived polyphenolic compounds. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev,9(2), 187-196.
  19. ^ Skiadas, P., & Lascaratos, J. (2001). Dietetics in ancient Greek philosophy: Plato's concepts of healthy diet. Published Online: 14 June 2001; | doi:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1601179, 55(7).
  20. ^ Jouanna, J., Eijk, P. J. v. d., & Allies, N. (2012).Greek medicine from Hippocrates to Galen: Selected papers(Studies in Ancient Medicine; Studies in ancient medicine). Leiden: Brill.
  21. ^ Galen, & Grant, M. (2000). Galen: on food and diet. (M. Grant, Trans.). London and New York: Routledge. P. 5
  22. ^ Galen, & Grant, M. (2000). Galen: on food and diet. (M. Grant, Trans.). London and New York: Routledge. P. 6
  23. ^ Galen, & Grant, M. (2000). Galen: on food and diet. (M. Grant, Trans.). London and New York: Routledge. P. 11
  24. ^ Galen, & Grant, M. (2000). Galen: on food and diet. (M. Grant, Trans.). London and New York: Routledge. P. 7

Bibliography edit

  • Galen, & Grant, M. (2000). Galen: on food and diet. (M. Grant, Trans.). London and New York: Routledge.
  • Garnsey, P. (1988). Famine and food supply in the Graeco-Roman world : Responses to risk and crisis. Cambridge Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press.
  • Garnsey, P. (1999). Food and society in classical antiquity (Key themes in ancient history; Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.
  • Garnsey, P., & Scheidel, W. (1998). Cities, peasants, and food in classical antiquity : Essays in social and economic history. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.
  • Hamlyn, D.W. [1968] 1993. Aristotle De Anima, Books II and III (with passages from Book I), translated with Introduction and Notes by D.W. Hamlyn, with a Report on Recent Work and a Revised Bibliography by Christopher Shields, Oxford: Clarendon Press. (First edition, 1968.).
  • Hippocrates, & Adams, F. (1886). The genuine works of Hippocrates (Wood's library of standard medical authors; Wood's library of standard medical authors). New York: William Wood and Company.
  • J. Mira Seo. (2010). Food and Drink, Roman(1. ed.). In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome. Oxford University Press.
  • Jouanna, J., Eijk, P. J. v. d., & Allies, N. (2012). Greek medicine from Hippocrates to Galen: Selected papers(Studies in Ancient Medicine; Studies in ancient medicine). Leiden: Brill.
  • Leitzmann C. (2014). Vegetarian nutrition: past, present, future. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 100, 496S-502S. doi:10.3945/ajcn.113.071365
  • McLaren, D. S. (1999). Towards the conquest of Vitamin A deficiency disorders. Basel, Switzerland: Task Force Sight and Life.
  • Orfanos, C. (2007). HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: From Hippocrates to modern medicine. Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology & Venereology, 21(6), 852–858.
  • Rocca, J. (2003). Galenic dietetics. Early Science And Medicine, 8(1), 44–51.
  • Sisko, J. E. (2010). Anaxagoras on Matter, Motion, and Multiple Worlds. Philosophy Compass, 5(6), 443–454. doi:10.1111/j.1747-9991.2010.00313.x
  • Skiadas, P., & Lascaratos, J. (2001). Dietetics in ancient Greek philosophy: Plato's concepts of healthy diet. , Published Online: 14 June 2001; | doi:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1601179, 55(7).
  • Thurmond, D. L. (2006). A handbook of food processing in classical Rome: For her bounty no winter(Technology and change in history, v. 9; Technology and change in history, v. 9). Leiden: Brill.
  • Ullah, M. F., & Khan, M. W. (2008). Food as medicine: potential therapeutic tendencies of plant derived polyphenolic compounds. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev,9(2), 187–196.
  • van der Eijk, P. J. (2002). Hippocrates: the protean father of medicine. The Lancet, 359(9325), 2285. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(02)09311-X

nutrition, classical, antiquity, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, poor, grammar, punctuation, arrangement, ideas, please, help, improve, this, article, april, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, me. This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Poor grammar punctuation and arrangement of ideas Please help improve this article if you can April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Classical antiquity is the period of cultural history spanning from the 8th century BC to the beginning of the Middle Ages which began around 500 AD The major civilizations are those of the Mediterranean region ancient Greece ancient Rome and southwest Asia Nutrition consisted of simple fresh or preserved whole foods that were either locally grown or transported from neighboring areas during times of crisis Physicians and philosophers studied the effect of food on the human body and they generally agreed that food was important in preventing illness and restoring health Three sea perch and three limpets Apulian red figured fish plate ca 340 320 BC British Museum Contents 1 Food of antiquity 2 Food shortage 3 People of interest 4 Medicine 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 BibliographyFood of antiquity editPeople ate various types of food consumers had choices from dairy milk and cheese fruits figs pears apples and pomegranates vegetables greens and bulbs grains and legumes cereal wheat barley millet beans and chickpeas and meat beef mutton fowl mussels and oysters 1 2 Food was most often fresh but the processing of food aided in the preservation for long term storage or transport to other cities Cereals olives wine legumes vegetables fruit and animal products could all be processed and stored for later use 3 Cereals were often processed and stored in the form of bread flat cakes and porridge 4 Legumes were also most often processed and stored as pulses and eaten with bread to enhance the flavor 5 Cereals were most nourishing providing essential macro and micronutrients to consumers 6 Cereals sustained individuals with sufficient amounts of protein vitamin B vitamin E calcium and iron 7 Fruits and vegetables provided vitamin A vitamin C vitamin D and half the dietary fiber needed for health support 8 Food shortage editCities depended on trade with agricultural farmers and neighboring cities for food supply due to the lack of land cultivation area 9 10 Food supply was altered by numerous events such as climate location and distribution 11 Weather drastically affected the amount of produce harvested during a growing season Climate often fluctuated in the Mediterranean region with varying temperatures and volumes of precipitation these two factors also affected the quality of soil available to farmers 12 Soil composition mainly depended on location but the climate affected the moisture retained within the soil 13 If the growing season was not prosperous then cities would have to resort to trade as a means for food supply This often made food distribution difficult due to political disagreements and issues with transportation 14 To combat hunger due to inadequate food supply people would eat twigs roots of plants bark from trees and each other as a last resort 15 Food shortages were frequent but did not last long enough to generate famine People of interest edit nbsp Kapitolinischer Pythagoras sculpturePythagoras 570 BC 495 BC was a Greek philosopher mathematician and is also considered to be the Father of Ethical Vegetarianism He believed that in order to obtain the highest level of spiritual and physical health it was necessary to follow a lifestyle that included a vegetarian diet which excluded meats and other flesh foods 16 Anaxagoras 500 BC 428 BC was also a Greek philosopher he suggested that foods that we ate contained fragments that were needed for growth in the body His belief was that everything is in everything at all times physical characteristics hair nails flesh etc were generated from foods that contained those same substances 17 Hippocrates 460 BC 377 BC was a physician known as the father of medicine his nutritional advice was based on the presence of the four humors in the body 18 Plato 428 427 BC 348 347 BC was a Greek philosopher and mathematician his idea of a healthy diet consisted of balance and moderation of cereals fruits vegetables dairy with a strong emphasis on the moderation of meat and wine 19 His belief is that excess food from one source would lead to future ailments Galen 129 AD 216 AD built much of his work by challenging the writings of others He was an admirer of Hippocrates because of the work he had done in the field of medicine 20 Galen believed that Hippocrates had stated all that needed to be known about nutrition and he would interpret his work by the presentation of his own knowledge 21 Medicine editThe humoral theory of medicine was central to medicine during antiquity and for centuries following Physicians believed that the body contained a mixture of bodily fluids the four humors black bile yellow bile phlegm and blood They assessed a patient s degree of health based on the balance of these four bodily fluids Diet was the first prescribed treatment of disease followed by drugs then surgery 22 Early physicians studied the different ways foods would affect the humors of the body by restoring health or causing disease Utilizing knowledge about how humors were affected by diet physicians prescribed diets with balance moderation and timing in mind Galen worked extensively on classifying foods according to how they interacted with the humors of the body 23 Galen had also noted that some foods had drug characteristics and for that reason during food preparation it was not uncommon to boil those foods two or three times 24 See also editAncient Greek cuisine History of vegetarianism Food and diet in Ancient medicineReferences editFootnotes edit Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press Skiadas P amp Lascaratos J 2001 Dietetics in ancient Greek philosophy Plato s concepts of healthy diet Published Online 14 June 2001 doi 10 1038 sj ejcn 1601179 55 7 Thurmond D L 2006 A handbook of food processing in classical Rome For her bounty no winter Technology and change in history v 9 Technology and change in history v 9 Leiden Brill Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 15 Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 15 Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 36 Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 12 Garnsey P amp Scheidel W 1998 Cities peasants and food in classical antiquity Essays in social and economic history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 183 Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 29 33 Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 34 Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 35 Thurmond D L 2006 A handbook of food processing in classical Rome For her bounty no winter Technology and change in history v 9 Technology and change in history v 9 Leiden Brill Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 35 Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press P 37 Leitzmann C 2014 Vegetarian nutrition past present future The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 100 496S 502S doi 10 3945 ajcn 113 071365 Sisko J E 2010 Anaxagoras on Matter Motion and Multiple Worlds Philosophy Compass 5 6 443 454 doi 10 1111 j 1747 9991 2010 00313 x Ullah M F amp Khan M W 2008 Food as medicine potential therapeutic tendencies of plant derived polyphenolic compounds Asian Pac J Cancer Prev 9 2 187 196 Skiadas P amp Lascaratos J 2001 Dietetics in ancient Greek philosophy Plato s concepts of healthy diet Published Online 14 June 2001 doi 10 1038 sj ejcn 1601179 55 7 Jouanna J Eijk P J v d amp Allies N 2012 Greek medicine from Hippocrates to Galen Selected papers Studies in Ancient Medicine Studies in ancient medicine Leiden Brill Galen amp Grant M 2000 Galen on food and diet M Grant Trans London and New York Routledge P 5 Galen amp Grant M 2000 Galen on food and diet M Grant Trans London and New York Routledge P 6 Galen amp Grant M 2000 Galen on food and diet M Grant Trans London and New York Routledge P 11 Galen amp Grant M 2000 Galen on food and diet M Grant Trans London and New York Routledge P 7 Bibliography edit Galen amp Grant M 2000 Galen on food and diet M Grant Trans London and New York Routledge Garnsey P 1988 Famine and food supply in the Graeco Roman world Responses to risk and crisis Cambridge Cambridgeshire Cambridge University Press Garnsey P 1999 Food and society in classical antiquity Key themes in ancient history Key themes in ancient history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press Garnsey P amp Scheidel W 1998 Cities peasants and food in classical antiquity Essays in social and economic history Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press Hamlyn D W 1968 1993 Aristotle De Anima Books II and III with passages from Book I translated with Introduction and Notes by D W Hamlyn with a Report on Recent Work and a Revised Bibliography by Christopher Shields Oxford Clarendon Press First edition 1968 Hippocrates amp Adams F 1886 The genuine works of Hippocrates Wood s library of standard medical authors Wood s library of standard medical authors New York William Wood and Company J Mira Seo 2010 Food and Drink Roman 1 ed In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome Oxford University Press Jouanna J Eijk P J v d amp Allies N 2012 Greek medicine from Hippocrates to Galen Selected papers Studies in Ancient Medicine Studies in ancient medicine Leiden Brill Leitzmann C 2014 Vegetarian nutrition past present future The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 100 496S 502S doi 10 3945 ajcn 113 071365 McLaren D S 1999 Towards the conquest of Vitamin A deficiency disorders Basel Switzerland Task Force Sight and Life Orfanos C 2007 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE From Hippocrates to modern medicine Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology amp Venereology 21 6 852 858 Rocca J 2003 Galenic dietetics Early Science And Medicine 8 1 44 51 Sisko J E 2010 Anaxagoras on Matter Motion and Multiple Worlds Philosophy Compass 5 6 443 454 doi 10 1111 j 1747 9991 2010 00313 x Skiadas P amp Lascaratos J 2001 Dietetics in ancient Greek philosophy Plato s concepts of healthy diet Published Online 14 June 2001 doi 10 1038 sj ejcn 1601179 55 7 Thurmond D L 2006 A handbook of food processing in classical Rome For her bounty no winter Technology and change in history v 9 Technology and change in history v 9 Leiden Brill Ullah M F amp Khan M W 2008 Food as medicine potential therapeutic tendencies of plant derived polyphenolic compounds Asian Pac J Cancer Prev 9 2 187 196 van der Eijk P J 2002 Hippocrates the protean father of medicine The Lancet 359 9325 2285 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 02 09311 X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nutrition in classical antiquity amp oldid 1092789123, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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