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Encyclopedia of society and culture in the ancient world ( PDFDrive ) 630

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Tiêu đề Hunting and Fishing in Ancient Greece
Tác giả Xenophon
Trường học University of Greece
Chuyên ngành Ancient Greek History and Culture
Thể loại essay
Năm xuất bản Fourth Century BCE
Thành phố Athens
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Most hunting by real people of the ancient Greek world was for food rather than for sport.. Our best source for techniques of ancient hunting is the work by the fourth-century philosophe

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life of the farm and town Artemis was the goddess of the

hunt and is oft en portrayed as an untamed spirit, exotic but

dangerous

Most hunting by real people of the ancient Greek world

was for food rather than for sport Since the main source of

protein for most people came from legumes such as lentils,

meat was a welcome addition to the table Our best source

for techniques of ancient hunting is the work by the

fourth-century philosopher, historian, and adventurer Xenophon

Cynegeticus, literally Dog Leader but oft en translated as

Hunter, describes techniques for hunting rabbits and hares,

deer and hinds, and the most challenging prey, the wild boar

He writes of how dogs or human “beaters” were employed to

drive animals out of the brush and into the open Many of the

other techniques Xenophon describes are clearly those of a

practical-minded hunter rather than a sportsman He

men-tions using pits and snares to trap animals, setting out clogs

(blocks of wood intended to trip a running animal) and nets

to impede animals until dogs could take them down, and

even capturing young animals, holding them, and beating

them so that their cries would draw their larger mothers to

the dogs or the spear

Boar was prized as a catch both for its meat and because

of the danger and diffi culty of hunting it Even when hunting

from horseback and with dogs, a human being had ultimately

to face the boar and kill it with a spear An enraged animal

could move quickly, dodging the spear or even impaling itself

on the weapon so deeply that its tusks could wound the hunter

An alternative was to kill the beast with thrown javelins, but

this had its own risks; the historian Herodotus describes how

the son of King Croesus of Lydia was killed by friendly fi re

during a boar hunt on Mount Olympus in Mysia

Dogs were indispensable assets for a hunter, as the title

of Xenophon’s treatise indicates Th e Greeks kept various

breeds of hounds Th e most common of these was the

La-conian hound (named aft er the southern region of Laconia,

near Sparta), which was bred into a larger breed, the

Casto-rian hound (perhaps like a modern greyhound), and crossed

with foxes to form a smaller breed called the Vulpine hound,

which may have resembled a modern whippet For hunting

boar, the ancient Greeks preferred so-called Indian hounds,

which may have been akin to the modern mastiff For the

most part, hunting was not conducted from horseback except

among Greek communities of Asia Minor

Xenophon’s writing on hunting, as well as references in

the works of Plato and those of Greek writers from later

centu-ries, tend to support an elitist distinction between aristocrats,

who could aff ord to hunt for sport, and the lower classes, who

hunted for profi t Th is refl ected a general bias toward land

ownership and agriculture as the proper pursuit of the upper

classes, while any activity aimed at fi nancial profi t was

con-sidered a base pursuit for the masses

Fishing appears widely in the art of the Bronze Age,

par-ticularly that of the Minoan palaces on Crete dating from the

second millennium b.c.e Nonetheless, seafood was not a

par-ticularly important part of the ancient Greek diet Th e water

of the Mediterranean Sea is too salty and too clear to support the variety of fi sh found in the Atlantic Ocean Fish popu-lations around areas inhabited by Greeks in antiquity were migratory and variable, making them an unreliable source of food In fact, ancient literature tends to portray fi shermen as

fi gures of excess, swinging from utter poverty to wild, tempo-rary wealth, with comic eff ect

But the ancient Greeks liked fi sh, which provided a wel-comed change of taste from the regular diet of bread, olive oil, and beans Because of its relative scarcity and the diffi culties

of transporting it fresh, fi sh was most oft en pickled and used

as a relish to enhance the taste of bread Th e ancient Greek

word for relish is opson or opsarion, and the modern Greek word for fi sh, psari, is derived from this ancient word.

Fish were oft en salted and dried by laying them out in shallow lagoons of seawater, which the sun would evaporate; the increasing salinity of the evaporating water would pre-serve the fi sh, which would end up very salty, dried, and eas-ily stored Th e salts and trace minerals in this dried fi sh were probably as important nutritionally as the protein

Th ere were few rivers in the world of the ancient Greeks, and most rivers dried to mere trickles during the summer months Th ere is virtually no evidence for freshwater fi shing

of any kind Th e Greeks caught fi sh close to shore with hand nets whose hauls included small octopuses and shellfi sh, from small boats off shore with cast nets, and in the deeper ocean with spears for larger fi sh such as tuna Fishing in deepwater was dangerous, since the seas of the Greek world were subject

to sudden violent storms Th ese storms were particularly dan-gerous for boats because of the relative shallowness of the sea

Fragments of a fresco from Tiryns, showing hunter and dog (Alison Frantz Photographic Collection, American School of Classical Studies at Athens)

hunting, fishing, and gathering: Greece 579

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