Top Banner
33

Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Mar 29, 2015

Download

Documents

Brayan Mathews
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 2: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Unguere: To Smear with Oil

Lori KissellFLAVA

October 04, 2013

Page 3: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Origin

• Gift of Athena• Symbol of Attica/Athens• Never most important Attic crop and likely not

primary export

Page 4: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production and Uses

Production – growing-crushing-pressing-transporting

Uses - -light-cooking-bodies-ritual

Page 5: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 6: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 7: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Growing:– Lower slopes of Apennines– Spain– Southern Gaul– Greece– Asiatic provinces– coastal Tripolitania and Cyrenaica– African provinces

Page 8: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Growing – Highly drought-resistant– Sensitive to frost– Usually crop every other year– Cuttings, ovules and grafts– Olives do not grow true to type from seeds– Table/oil varieties– Rarely mono-cultured

Page 9: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Growing– Combined with pastoralism– Harvested in autumn/winter– Greeks and Romans liked “white” olives for oil

Page 10: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Crushing– Packed in salt/saltwater first– Not edible raw– Crush first – Many devices known– Simplest – flat bed and stone roller, pestle,

wooden sandals– Best is Roman trapetum

Page 11: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 12: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 13: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Crushing– Don’t crush stones – add bitter taste– Luxury/quality oil removed stones first or minimal

crushing of stones– Machines existed for stone removal, questionable

effectiveness– Crushed olives moved to frails, then to presses

Page 14: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 15: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Pressing– Simplest and most common press = beam– Weighted with rocks, human pulling– End fixed in wall as fulcrum– Weight pulled onto crushed olives in frails,

pressing oil out

Page 16: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 17: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 18: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 19: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Pressing-Improvements to beam press incl. winch, lever and drum, better anchoring-Screw 1st assisted, then replaced beam-Direct screw press replaced beam 1st C. CE-Possible because of screw, screw nut 3rd C BCE--Pliny, screw extracts more, risks bitterness

Page 20: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 21: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Pressing– Separate oil and water– Romans ladle from top per Cato (Agr. 66) and

Columella (Rust. 12.52-8-12)– Greeks more commonly use bottom spout method– Presscake remains, used for pig food and fertilizer

Page 22: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Transporting– Most olives raised and consumed locally– Oil keeps better, and is traded– Luxury oils for quality, taste, added flavorings

traded like vintage wine

Page 23: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Production

• Transporting– Attica, Samos, Venafrum, Baetica, Cyrenaica all

famous for oil– Stored and transported in large jars (dolia/pithoi)– Sold in amphorae– 2/3 sherds in Mt. Testaccio are olive oil amphorae– Peak in trade 140-165 CE

Page 24: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses

• Light– Lamps were pottery, bronze, gold, silver, iron, lead,

ceramic– Single or multiple nozzle styles– Freestanding or suspended– Smokeless or minimal smoke

Page 25: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.
Page 26: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses

• Cooking– Roman recipes abound with olive oil– Dunk (morning) bread– Infuse with flavors – herbs? decadent?

Page 27: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses

• Bodies– Baths and strigils– Skin oils

Page 28: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses

Bodies- Perfumes

Page 29: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses• Bodies– Medicaments

Page 30: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses

Ritual-Oil from sacred trees (moriai) given as

prizes in Panathenaic Games

Page 31: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses

Ritual-Libations

Page 32: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.

Uses

• Roman wedding– Anoint couple’s new door with oil-soaked wool

Page 33: Unguere: To Smear with Oil Lori Kissell FLAVA October 04, 2013.