[Sca-cooks] Another contempory account of drinking water

Mark.S Harris mark.s.harris at motorola.com
Fri Jun 29 17:35:36 PDT 2001


In editing my bev-water-msg file, I came across this recent message.
I thought some here might be interested. This would seem to be another
indication that plain water was drunk, even if it wasn't a favorite
beverage. Since it was generally the better off folks that could afford
to make a pilgrimage, and the only ones that would be reading such a
travelogue, this also indicates that the better off and not just
the peasants, did drink plain water.

Stefan li Rous
stefan at texas.net

> Subject: ANST - Period Travel Guides
> Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 19:40:42 -0400
> From: fitzmorgan at cs.com
> To: ansteorra at ansteorra.org
>
> > I assume that people wrote "travel guides" during the Middle Ages and
> > Renaissance. Have any survived? Where can they be found? What do they
> > cover?
> >
> > Jovian
>
> Look for "The Pilgrims Guide To Santiago De Compostela"   Written in , I
> think, the 12th Century.  and translated by William Melczer.  Italica Press,
> INC.  ISBN 0-934977-25-9 for $17.50 if it's still in print.  This is a travel
> guide for pilgrims telling of dangers to avoid and sites to see on your
> pilgrimage.
>
>       It tells which rivers you can safely drink from and which are unsafe.
> It says some rude things about the Basque.  And tells short stories about the
> many Saints who's shrines you will see on the way.  It's well worth reading.
>
> Robert Fitzmorgan
> Barony of Northkeep



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