The stool that Hondelink examines comes from sewers in Delft. In a sense, it owes its ability to do so to a wildfire that reduced a large part of that city to ashes in the first half of the sixteenth century. Prior to rebuilding, the council decreed that every building must have a sink. Fun fact: The septic tanks were emptied at night, and then farmers used this “city dung” to fertilize their land. Human waste as fertilizer.
Eat and defecate
Many of those sewers still contain faeces from then on. This ancient stool contains important information about the eating habits of early modern people in the Netherlands. Hondelink sifts this residue, so that the seeds and fruit residue float to the top. Then I found, for example, grape seed from 1625, which comes from the nursing home in Delft. “The question then, was it table grapes, or currants, or raisins, that they ate and excreted?”
Hardly any change in diet
In the 17th century, the Dutch fleet sailed over large parts of the world, taking all kinds of things home, including food. You expect the diet to become more diverse. Does Hundelink also see this reflected in her research? Exotic spices and herbs were already known in the Middle Ages, but were available only to the upper classes. Surely the prices [in de zeventiende eeuw] decreased with the increase in imports. But it’s not like I found more pepper, cloves, and nutmeg in the tubs. This is better than expected.”
She continued, “I like more pepper, but if you look at the basic ingredients, they stay pretty much the same. I’m still finishing my research, but I tend to think that people are just beginning to eat differently in terms of the staple food.”
less meat
At least: in terms of vegetarian food. Meat consumption has not changed. “In the early modern period, we had to deal with a huge increase in population. These people relied on what farmers could produce across the city. As a result, people started eating less meat at that time.”