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Toitumine, etnilisus ja ühiskondlik staatus keskaegses tallinnas, nähtuna läbi stabiilsete isotoopide analüüsi

Lightfoot, Emma ; Naum, Magdalena LU ; Kadakas, Villu and Russow, Erki (2016) In Estonian Journal of Archaeology 20(1). p.81-107
Abstract

Food encodes social and cultural values and has an important role to play in defining identities. In mixed populations, diet can be used to distinguish between ‘us’ and ‘them’. This study investigates the extent to which the inhabitants of mediaeval Tallinn, an important trading centre, used food to maintain distinct identities. Human skeletal material was selected from four mediaeval cemeteries in Tallinn, chosen to represent different groups within Tallinn’s society, likely including foreign merchants, foreign monks, urban Estonians and low-status Estonians, and from a nearby rural site, Kaberla, for comparative purposes. The individuals were investigated using carbon, nitrogen and oxygen stable isotope analysis. The results indicate... (More)

Food encodes social and cultural values and has an important role to play in defining identities. In mixed populations, diet can be used to distinguish between ‘us’ and ‘them’. This study investigates the extent to which the inhabitants of mediaeval Tallinn, an important trading centre, used food to maintain distinct identities. Human skeletal material was selected from four mediaeval cemeteries in Tallinn, chosen to represent different groups within Tallinn’s society, likely including foreign merchants, foreign monks, urban Estonians and low-status Estonians, and from a nearby rural site, Kaberla, for comparative purposes. The individuals were investigated using carbon, nitrogen and oxygen stable isotope analysis. The results indicate that while all analysed individuals consumed diets based on C3 plants and animals consuming C3 plants, some individuals also consumed small amounts of C4 plants (likely millet) or seafood. C4 plants were consumed by the urban residents buried at the Church of the Holy Spirit and one or two individuals from Sulevimägi. It is thought that millet was an imported food consumed by the middle class. Marine foods were consumed by the individuals at St Catherine’s Church. These individuals were also identified as migrants and were likely either monks or foreign merchants. The results suggest that in some cases the people of Tallinn did use food as a means of maintaining social statuses and potentially ethnicities. Only one individual (LTL06) was identified as having had a significant change in diet during life, with the inclusion of marine foods in adulthood. This may indicate that this individual attained or aspired to higher social status during life and adhered to Christian dietary customs.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
alternative title
The influence of social status and ethnicity on diet in mediaeval Tallinn as seen through stable isotope analysis
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Estonian Journal of Archaeology
volume
20
issue
1
pages
27 pages
publisher
Estonian Academy Publishers
external identifiers
  • scopus:84969981778
ISSN
1406-2933
DOI
10.3176/arch.2016.1.04
language
Estonian
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2016, Estonian Academy Publishers. All rights reserved.
id
dc1cf464-46fb-4a0b-bf50-51096e009378
date added to LUP
2023-09-12 21:19:50
date last changed
2023-09-25 13:59:15
@article{dc1cf464-46fb-4a0b-bf50-51096e009378,
  abstract     = {{<p>Food encodes social and cultural values and has an important role to play in defining identities. In mixed populations, diet can be used to distinguish between ‘us’ and ‘them’. This study investigates the extent to which the inhabitants of mediaeval Tallinn, an important trading centre, used food to maintain distinct identities. Human skeletal material was selected from four mediaeval cemeteries in Tallinn, chosen to represent different groups within Tallinn’s society, likely including foreign merchants, foreign monks, urban Estonians and low-status Estonians, and from a nearby rural site, Kaberla, for comparative purposes. The individuals were investigated using carbon, nitrogen and oxygen stable isotope analysis. The results indicate that while all analysed individuals consumed diets based on C3 plants and animals consuming C3 plants, some individuals also consumed small amounts of C4 plants (likely millet) or seafood. C4 plants were consumed by the urban residents buried at the Church of the Holy Spirit and one or two individuals from Sulevimägi. It is thought that millet was an imported food consumed by the middle class. Marine foods were consumed by the individuals at St Catherine’s Church. These individuals were also identified as migrants and were likely either monks or foreign merchants. The results suggest that in some cases the people of Tallinn did use food as a means of maintaining social statuses and potentially ethnicities. Only one individual (LTL06) was identified as having had a significant change in diet during life, with the inclusion of marine foods in adulthood. This may indicate that this individual attained or aspired to higher social status during life and adhered to Christian dietary customs.</p>}},
  author       = {{Lightfoot, Emma and Naum, Magdalena and Kadakas, Villu and Russow, Erki}},
  issn         = {{1406-2933}},
  language     = {{est}},
  month        = {{06}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{81--107}},
  publisher    = {{Estonian Academy Publishers}},
  series       = {{Estonian Journal of Archaeology}},
  title        = {{Toitumine, etnilisus ja ühiskondlik staatus keskaegses tallinnas, nähtuna läbi stabiilsete isotoopide analüüsi}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3176/arch.2016.1.04}},
  doi          = {{10.3176/arch.2016.1.04}},
  volume       = {{20}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}