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Timeline of food

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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This is a timeline of human food and food-related cultural habits, as well as those of our closest extinct relatives. The cut-off point for inclusion is the separation of the Hominina from Pan, the genus that includes modern-day chimpanzees.

Prehistoric times

  • 5-2 million years ago: Hominids shift away from the consumption of nuts and berries to begin the consumption of meat.[1][2]
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A hearth with cooking utensils
  • 2.5-1.8 million years ago: The discovery of the use of fire may have created a sense of sharing as a group. Earliest estimate for invention of cooking, by phylogenetic analysis.[3]
  • 250,000 years ago: Earliest uncontroversial archaeological evidence of hearths.[4]
  • 170,000 years ago: Cooked starchy roots and tubers in Africa.[5][6]
  • 40,000 years ago: First evidence of human fish consumption: isotopic analysis of the skeletal remains of Tianyuan man, a modern human from eastern Asia, has shown that he regularly consumed freshwater fish.[7][8]
  • 30,000 years ago: Earliest archaeological evidence for flour, which was likely processed into an unleavened bread, dates to the Upper Palaeolithic in Europe.[9]
  • 25,000 years ago: The fish-gorge, a kind of fish hook, appears.[10]
  • 13,000 BCE: Contentious evidence of oldest domesticated rice in Korea.[11] Their 15,000-year age challenges the accepted view that rice cultivation originated in China about 12,000 years ago.[11] These findings were received by academia with strong skepticism,[12] and the results and their publicizing has been cited as being driven by a combination of nationalist and regional interests.[13]
  • 12,500 BCE: The oldest evidence of bread-making, found in a Natufian site in Jordan's northeastern desert.[14][15]
  • 11,500 - 6200 BCE: Genetic evidence published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS) shows that all forms of Asian rice, both indica and japonica, spring from a single domestication that occurred 8,200–13,500 years ago in China of the wild rice Oryza rufipogon.[16]
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Neolithic

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Fresh figs cut open showing the flesh and seeds inside
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4000-2000 BCE

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Ripening olives
  • Earliest archaeological evidence for leavened bread is from ancient Egypt. The extent to which bread was leavened in ancient Egypt remains uncertain.[31]
  • 4500–3500 BCE: Earliest clear evidence of olive domestication and olive oil extraction.[32]
  • ~4000 BCE: Watermelon, originally domesticated in central Africa, becomes an important crop in northern Africa and southwestern Asia.[33]
  • ~4000 BCE: Agriculture reaches north-eastern Europe.
  • ~4000 BCE: Dairy is documented in the grasslands of the Sahara.[34]
  • 4000 BCE: Citron seeds in Mesopotamian excavations.[35]
  • ~3900 BCE: In Mesopotamia (Ancient Iraq), early evidence of beer is a Sumerian poem honoring Ninkasi, the patron goddess of brewing, which contains the oldest surviving beer recipe, describing the production of beer from barley via bread.[36]
  • ~3600 BCE: Date of the oldest definitive known evidence for popcorn, discovered in New Mexico, United States. It is attributed to the Ancestral Puebloan peoples, who maintained trade networks with peoples in tropical Mexico.[37][38]
  • ~3500 BCE: Beer produced in what is today Iran.
  • ~3500 BCE: Aquaculture starts in China with the farming of the common carp.[39]
  • ~3500–3000 BCE: Several breeds of sheep were established in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt.[23]:3
  • ~3000 BCE: Palm oil found in a tomb in Abydos.[40]
  • ~3000 BCE: Grape cultivation for wine had spread to the Fertile Crescent, the Jordan Valley and Egypt.[27]
  • ~3000 BCE: Sunflowers are first cultivated in North America.[17]
  • ~3000 BCE: South America's Andes region cultivates potato.[17]
  • ~3000 BCE: Archaeological evidence of watermelon cultivation in ancient Egypt. Watermelons appeared on wall paintings; seeds and leaves were deposited in tombs.[33]
  • ~3000 BCE: Beer was spread through Europe by Germanic and Celtic tribes[41]
  • ~3000 BCE: Two alabaster jars found at Saqqara, dating from the First Dynasty of Egypt, contained cheese.[42] These were placed in the tomb about 3000 BC.[43]
  • ~2500 BCE: Domestic pigs, which are descended from wild boars, are known to have existed about 2500 BC in modern-day Hungary and in Troy; earlier pottery from Jericho and Egypt depicts wild pigs.[23]:8
  • ~2500 BCE: Pearl millet was domesticated in the Sahel region of West Africa, evidence for the cultivation of pearl millet in Mali.[44]
  • 2500–1500 BCE: Time range of several sites with archaeological evidence of potato being consumed and cultivated in the South American continent.[20]
  • 2000–1500 BCE: Rice cultivation in the upper and middle Ganges begins.[25]
  • ~2000 BCE: Visual evidence of Egyptian cheesemaking found in Egyptian tomb murals.[45]
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2000–1 BCE

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1–1000 CE

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Pretzel depicted at a banquet of Queen Esther and King Ahasuerus. 12th century Hortus deliciarum.
  • 5th century: Bok choy originates in China.[55]
  • 5th century: The Roman cuisine cookbook Apicius, or De re coquinaria is published.[56]
  • 610: Possible invention of the pretzel. According to some narratives in 610 CE "... [a]n Italian monk invents pretzels as a reward to children who learn their prayers. He calls the strips of baked dough, folded to resemble arms crossing the chest, 'pretiola' ('little reward[s]')".[57][58][59][60][61]
  • 8th century: The original type of sushi, known today as narezushi (馴れ寿司, 熟寿司), first developed in Southeast Asia and spread to south China, is introduced to Japan.[62][63]
  • 8th century: Chronicles from monasteries mention Roquefort being transported across the Alps[64]
  • ~800: Cod become an important economic commodity in international markets. This market has lasted for more than 1,000 years, enduring the Black Death, wars and other crises, and it is still an important Norwegian fish trade.[65]
  • ~800: By this date, watermelon reached India.[33]
  • 9th century: First record of cucumber cultivation in France[33]
  • 822: First mention of hops added to beer, by the Carolingian abbot Adalard of Corbie[66]
  • 879: Gorgonzola cheese is mentioned for the first time.[64]
  • 961: Watermelons, introduced by the Moorish, reported to be cultivated in Cordoba, Spain.[33]
  • 997: The term "pizza" first appears "in a Latin text from the southern Italian town of Gaeta [...], which claims that a tenant of certain property is to give the bishop of Gaeta 'duodecim pizze' ['twelve pizzas'] every Christmas Day, and another twelve every Easter Sunday".[67][68]
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1000–1500

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Bog butter from A Descriptive Catalogue of the Antiquities in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy, 1857
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16th century

  • 16th century: first mention of hasty pudding
  • 1516: William IV, Duke of Bavaria, adopted the Reinheitsgebot (purity law), perhaps the oldest food-quality regulation still in use in the 21st century, according to which the only allowed ingredients of beer are water, hops and barley-malt.[73]
  • 1521: Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés may have been the first to transfer a small yellow tomato to Europe after he captured the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan, now Mexico City.[50]
  • 1530: Maize introduced into Spain by Hernán Cortés from Mexico
  • 1535: Spanish conquerors first see potato.[74]
  • 1544: The earliest discussion of the tomato in European literature appeared in a herbal written in 1544 by Pietro Andrea Mattioli, an Italian physician and botanist.[50]
  • 1548: First recorded instance of tomatoes in Italy: on October 31, the house steward of Cosimo de' Medici, the grand duke of Tuscany, wrote to the Medici private secretary informing him that the basket of tomatoes sent from the grand duke's Florentine estate at Torre del Gallo "had arrived safely".[75]
  • ~1550: First mention of cucumber cultivation in North America.[33]
  • ~1570: First potato specimens probably reach Spain.[20]
  • 1573: Potatoes are purchased by the Hospital de la Sangre in Seville.[20]
  • 1576: Watermelons cultivated in Florida by Spanish settlers.[33]
  • 1578: Sir Francis Drake meets potatoes in his trip around the world. However he does not bring potatoes back to Great Britain, despite common misconception.[20]
  • 1583-1613: Guaman Poma de Ayala writes a chronicle of the Incas where he describes and depicts potato and maize cultivation.[25]
  • 1584: Grits first introduced to European explorers by Native Americans in Roanoke, North Carolina[76]
  • 1585: First recorded commercial shipment of chocolate to Europe, in a shipment from Veracruz to Seville[77]
  • 1590: José de Acosta described chuño in his chronicles.[20]
  • 1596: Caspar Bauhin, Swiss botanist, first described potato scientifically in his Phytopinax, assigning it the current binomial name Solanum tuberosum. However he conjectured potatoes could cause wind and leprosy (because of a vague resemblance to leprous organs) and that they were aphrodisiac.[20]
  • Before 17th century: Watermelon appears in herbals in mainland Europe, outside Spain. It also begins to spread among Native American populations.[33]
  • Late 16th century–17th century: Cucumber, along with maize, beans, squash, pumpkins, and gourds are cultivated by Native Americans in what is today southern United States and, later, the region of Great Plains.[33]
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17th century

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18th century

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An examen chimique du pommes de terre ("A chemistry exam of the potatoes") by Antoine-Augustin Parmentier promoted the introduction of potatoes to France.
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19th century

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20th century

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21st century

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Modern aquaculture

See also

References

Further reading

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