Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Spelling, Dates, and Other Conventions
- List of Common Abbreviations
- Introduction: A New History of Medieval Scandinavia
- Part I Food Production: Natural and Supernatural Strategies
- Part II Food Trade, Distribution, and Commercial Activities
- Part III Food Spaces, Consumption, and Feasting
- Index of names and texts
- Index of places
5 - What Did the Norwegians Drink?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 November 2022
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Spelling, Dates, and Other Conventions
- List of Common Abbreviations
- Introduction: A New History of Medieval Scandinavia
- Part I Food Production: Natural and Supernatural Strategies
- Part II Food Trade, Distribution, and Commercial Activities
- Part III Food Spaces, Consumption, and Feasting
- Index of names and texts
- Index of places
Summary
Abstract
The chapter describes Norwegians’ drinking habits in the Middle Ages. The sources testify to a lot of drunkenness and subsequent fights and riots. However, Norwegians were hardly drunk all the time. Wine seems to have been relatively difficult to obtain. The domestic Norwegian beer had a weak alcohol content, and the good and stronger German beer had to be imported. The most common drink was milk, possibly a mixture of milk and water. Water also seems to have been a thirst quencher. Norwegian kings had taverns built around the country. The bottling and sale of beer was regulated. Drinking was a central part of social life. Queen Margrete advised King Erik to serve the Norwegians good German beer in 1405.
Keywords: Norway, Wine, Beer, Drunkenness, Milk, Tavern
In 1442, the German merchants in Oslo and Tønsberg complained bitterly to Lübeck and other Hanseatic towns about what they saw as a violation of their privileges by the Norwegian authorities. They mentioned by name the commanders of the royal castles at Tønsberg and Oslo, who belonged to Norway's aristocratic and political elite in the first half of the fifteenth century. As members of the Norwegian Council of the Realm and commanders of castles in towns where German merchants were trading, these two noblemen were leading proponents of a determined Norwegian policy that sought to reduce the German merchants’ dominant trading position. The aim of this policy was not to expel German merchants from Norway, but rather to reduce and limit their economic role.
According to the German merchants, the commander in Oslo, Sigurd Jonsson (Sørum) had declared that he would try with all his power and all his men to drive them out of Norway, even if it meant that he would have to drink water for the rest of his life. Sigurd Jonson's reference to drinking water alluded to the danger of good German beer disappearing from Norway along with the German merchants: Norwegians had come to prefer German beer to their own.
Drink for Survival, Pleasure, or Drunkenness?
People were thirsty in the Middle Ages. The food was salty due to preserving and most people carried out more heavy manual labour than they do today. Besides water and milk, the only other drinking alternatives in the Middle Ages were beer and wine.
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- Food Culture in Medieval Scandinavia , pp. 117 - 130Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022