In the delightful but historically inaccurate movie Becket,
starring Peter O’Toole and Richard Burton, one of the least of the errors made
was Becket introducing young King Henry II to the table fork. The fork barely existed then even in Venice where
it was probably introduced in the West.
At about the time that Henry ruled, it had just been introduced from the
Byzantine Empire.
Even venerated scholars of Medieval anthropology, such as
Joseph Strutt, have been known to express disbelief upon discovering that there
would appear to be absolutely no record of the table fork in Medieval times.
I find here no mention of forks. It is strange that so useful
and cleanly an utensil should not have been of more ancient date; but of
certainty, in all the old delineations of feasts, &c. I find knives and spoons,
but never either forks, or any things which might seem likely to supply their place.[1]
In all the records we have, the standard table setting includes
only a spoon and table knife by way of utensils.
We may have evidence of its first introduction in
Europe. The Venetian Doge, Domenico
Selvo, married the Byzantine Princess Theodora Anna Doukaina in 1075.[2] Among the many traits for which the Venetian
people despised the haughty Theodora was her use of a silver fork when she ate.
Pompeo Molmenti does not give his reader the specific date
but does follow his passing mention of the Princess with a highly informative
footnote on our subject:
In the West the earliest mention of a fork is in an inventory
of Edward I of England, dated 1297. In 1368 we find a gold fork in an inventory
of Louis d'Anjou; but the forks did not become well known till 1379, when we
find them recorded among the plate of the royal household; nor did they take
their place as a common article till the end of the sixteenth century. Montaigne
declares that he made but little use of fork or spoon. [The French King] Henry III, who on his way
through Venice had seen forks in use, made haste to adopt them (Havard, Dict.
de I'ameublement, s. v. fourchette), but even Louis XIV thought a
fork a superfluous luxury. The Venetian fork appears in Italian guise for the
first time in the fourteenth century in an inventory of the Commune of Florence
(1361).[3]
The reference to the inventory of the English King Edward I
is not to his “plate” — his implements of eating — but to his collection of
rare and curious objects for display.
The first mention we have of the table fork, in England, as
an implement of eating, remains the much quoted swatch from Thomas Coryat’s Crudities:
Here I will mention a thing, that might have been spoken of
before, in discourse of the first Italian town. I observed a custome in all those
Italian cities and townes through the which I passed, that is not used in any
other country that I saw in my travels, neither doe I thinke that any other nation
of christendome doth use it, but only Italy. The Italian and also most strangers
that are commorant in Italy, doe alwaies at their meales use a little forke,
when they cut their meate. For while with their knife which they hold in one
hande they cut the meate out of the dish, they fasten their forke, which they
hold in their other hand upon the same dish, so that whatsoever he be that
fitting in the company of any others at meale, should unadvisedly touch the dish
of meate with his fingers, from which all at the table doe cut, he will give
occasion of offence unto the company, as having transgressed the lawes of good
manners, in so much that for his error he shall be at the least brow beaten, if
not reprehended in wordes. This forme of feeding I understand is generally used
in all places of Italy, their forkes being for the most part made of yron or steele
and some of silver, but those are used only by gentlemen. The reason of this their curiosity is, because
the Italian cannot by any means indure to have his dish touched with fingers, seeing
all mens fingers are not alike cleane. Hereupon I myself thought good to
imitate the Italian fashion by this forked cutting of meate, not only while I
was in Italy, but also in Germany, and oftentimes in England since I came home:
being once quipped for that frequent using of my forke, by a certain learned
gentleman, a familiar friend of mine, one M. Laurence Whitaker, who in his
merry humour doubted not to call me at table Furcifer, only for using a
forke at feeding, but for no other cause.[4]
After Coryat, the mentions become much more frequent. For decades still, however, those mentions
will portray the implement as foreign and/or ridiculous.
In Chamber’s journal we are reminded that
Fynes Morison, in his Itinerary (1617), when relating
the bargain he made with the master of the vessel which was to convey him from
Venice to Constantinople, says: ‘He gave us good diet, serving each man with
his knife, a spoon, and a fork.’[5]
With the exception of Italy, however, no other European country
adopted the fork as its custom until at least the 16th century. Coryat, who brought it in the 17th
century, would be long in the grave before it became common in Britain.
After Coryat, the fork had the singular good fortune, in
Britain, to tickle the fancy of Ben Jonson who made fun of those affected to
use it in two plays. Fletcher still
writes of it as an affectation in his play Queen of Corinth in 1647.
By 1652, the implement appears to have made inroads. Peter Heylyn tends to be an excellent source[6]
and he tells us it had become popular with the young gallants around town.
The use of silver Forks with us, by some of our spruce
Gallants taken up of late, came from hence into Italy, and from thence into
England.[7]
This, of course, was sure to make the fork a common item on
English tables in short order.
[1] Strutt, Joseph. Horda
Angel Cynnan, III. n. 108
[2]
Numerous historians of the fork mention the date as 1095, many years after the
Dogressa / Princess had died.
[3] Molmenti,
Pompeo. Venice Its Individual Growth from
the Earliest Beginnings to the Fall of the Republic. Hortio F. Brown, transl. (1907). 126-7.
Citing Lumbroso, Mem. ital.
del buon tempo antico, pp. 8i et seq. Torino, 1889.
[4] Warner,
Rev. Richard. Antiquitates
Culinariae; or Curious Tracts relating to the Culinary affairs of the Old
English. liii – liv. Citing Coryat's
Crudities, vol. I. p. 106. edit. 1776. 8vo.
The Crudities was originally published in 1611, describing Thomas
Coryat’s tour through Europe in 1608.
[5] “Table-Forks,
Historically Handled.” Chamber’s Journal, Volume IV, Nos. 79-104 July-December, 1855. 266-8 @ 267.
[6]
However much he claims that the fork was introduced into Italy from China.
[7] Heylyn,
Peter. Cosmography (1668). III. 182.
Also at Virtual Grub Street:
- A Medieval Hodge-Podge. March 17, 2019. “The hogge pot had already existed for centuries, however. Many who fail to realize this have given spurious derivations to the name.”
- Hedingham Castle Fact Sheet with Virtual Tour Link. January 20, 2019. “The modern entrance to the keep is on the first floor by way of a stone stair, discharging through the W. wall, where a fore-building used to stand.”
- Did Shake-speare Die of a Stroke? August 03, 2014. "In October of 1601 De Vere begins to complain of his health again in letters to his brother-in-law, Robert Cecil, who was representing him in certain legal matters at Court."
- Check out the Medieval Topics Article Index for many more articles about this fascinating time.
- Check out the English Renaissance Article Index for many more articles and reviews about this fascinating time.
Charles Readers refers to a fork as a bizarre novelty in "The Cloister and the Hearth", his novel about the early life of Erasmus
ReplyDeleteI believe Cosmologie was written as of 1652; he died in 1662; and I believe it was printed in 1674. Typo or is this his son or something, as my reference is Wikipedia, which might also be wrong.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.pepysdiary.com/encyclopedia/12827/#wikipedia
Microcosmus. A little description of the great world 1621 (−1639); enlarged and entitled Cosmographie in four bookes, containing the chorographie and historie of the whole world 1652 (1674).
History can play tricks like this. Of course people used forks, and had been using them since they lived in caves and used forked hardwood twigs to roast their meat over fires just outside. A people who used pitchforks in the fields would not have been slow to use the same implement to roast or eat their meat. Just because historians fail to mention something doesn't mean it didn't exist.
ReplyDeleteSomehow I missed your comment, Sally. The earliest edition I could find reproduced (in Google Book Search) was 1668, London, "Printed for A. Seile". As I recall, some bibliographies show an earlier version, but, for all my not inconsiderable efforts, I have never been able to find a copy.
ReplyDeleteAs you probably know, the mention of forks does not mean they were used as we now use them. In England, a fork with two tines was used by some of the nobility to spear sticky sweets in the "banquetting" course. Here's one such mention in various wills: " The Will of John Baret of Bury St. Edmunds, 1463: "Itm J. yeve and beqwethe
ReplyDeleteto Davn John Kertelynge my silvir forke for grene gyngor"[Bailey]
The Jewelhouse inventory of Henry VIII: "Item one spone wt suckett fork at
the end of silver and gilt"[Bailey]
Inventory of property left by Henry VII: "Item, one Case wherein are xxi knives and a fork, the hafts being crystal and chalcedony, the ends garnished with gold" [Hayward]
"Item, one Case of knives furnished with divers knives and one fork, whereof two be great hafts of silver parcel-gilt, the case covered with crimson velvet" [Hayward].
You might also be interested in two early depictions of forks in these medieval art. https://www.facebook.com/MedievalAdvisor/photos/a.116995777149140/196134555901928/ and https://www.facebook.com/MedievalAdvisor/photos/p.196148972567153/196148972567153/?type=3
As a modern, elderly, female, I am coming to the conclusion that the medieval critics were correct: forks are the instrument of the devil! I now put down my fork and pick up a spoon when dealing with peas, corn, and other smallish foods. Even salads fall off the fork when my hand trembles! If it can't be easily speared, use a spoon!
The Irish have been using a two-tined fork (áel) or three-tined fork (áel-trébend) for eons. Known as a flesh fork, it accompanied the feast cauldron. The kings champion was awarded the right to use the fork to claim the best gobbet of meat. Fines and penalties were awarded to anyone injured by an áel during the claiming of the meat. In 598 AD, St. Maidoc of Ferns awarded a cauldron and áel to Branduff, king of Leinster. The Irish invented the fork.
ReplyDelete