Evidence of everiday punic culinary habits from Proratiora island, Sardinia

The preparation and consumption of food in everyday circumstances is an often-overlooked aspect of communal eating and drinking. This article examines a series of cooking pots from the island site of Proratora in north Sardinia which provide the basis for a discussion of ancient Mediterranean consum...

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Veröffentlicht in:Saguntum (Valencia) 2019-12, Vol.51, p.121-131
1. Verfasser: Hayne, Jeremy Mark
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The preparation and consumption of food in everyday circumstances is an often-overlooked aspect of communal eating and drinking. This article examines a series of cooking pots from the island site of Proratora in north Sardinia which provide the basis for a discussion of ancient Mediterranean consumption practices and raises interesting questions about the way such social practices are the basis of communal identity in a period and place usually understood as divided between the Roman and Carthaginian worlds
ISSN:0210-3729
2174-517X
DOI:10.7203/SAGVNTVM.51.15151