SC - Quinces (and a query about an eating utensil)
Elaine Koogler
ekoogler at chesapeake.net
Sun May 7 15:44:17 PDT 2000
I was the one who sent out the query about the spoon/fork combination
instrument. I had purchased it from one of our Atlantian metalworkers (very good
on documentation of his work), who told me that they were Anglo-Saxon and quite
early, around 900 or so, as I recall. I did not get the actual documentation
from him, but when I brought it up to the list, I received the following
information:
_European Spoons Before 1700_, by John Emery, John Donald Publishing, Ltd,
1976.
P.63 (Northern Europe):
"Of slightly later date are two unfinished combined spoons and forks from a
hoard of coins and silver scrap dug up at Sevington in Wiltshire and dated
about A. D. 850. . . .the earliest appearance of a definite two-pronged fork
[in Northern Europe]. . . ."
It came from Rudd Rayfield, and definitely corresponded with what our craftsman
told me.
Hope this helps!
Kiri
DianaFiona at aol.com wrote:
>
> On a completely different subject, does anyone remember an eating utensil
> which was mentioned on the List a few weeks ago? It was a spoon on one end
> and a 3 tined fork on the other.
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