Re: message to Tom McDonald re. cayennepepper
- From: "Inger E" <inger no spam_e.johansson@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 06 Jul 2007 11:21:58 GMT
"Alan Crozier" <name1.name2@xxxxxxxxx> skrev i meddelandet
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"Inger E" <inger no spam_e.johansson@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in messagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-Columbian_trans-oceanic_contact#Agriculture
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other
"Tedd Jacobs" <tjacobs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> skrev i meddelandet
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"Inger E" wrote...
I was in contact with the library where I read the article and
worksthere
of the Prof. Due to it's limited open hours during July I can't go
journal inuntil monday. The other library here in Gothenburg where the
title,question can be read will not open until 30th July.
so you'll, of course, give references to these articles. author,
journal, etc.?
Done so earlier this week.
And to make it easier for Tedd to follow this debate, it's best to
repeat the reference to Hjelmqvist's article, which can be found here:
(see note 4).
Hakon Hjelmqvist (1905-1999) was the Swedish pioneer of archaeobotany,
who was honoured shortly after his death by having the following
conference volume dedicated to him:
http://www.umu.se/archaeology/publikation/ae/viklund2002_eng.html
In other words, this is an unusually serious and authoritative and
well-documented claim, published in a peer-reviewed journal by a scholar
whose name is only ever spoken with reverence. I haven't read his
article on the alleged find of cayenne pepper in medieval Lund (I have
only one issue of that journal here at home, from 1991 -- it has an
article by him about garden plants in medieval Lund but no mention of
Capsicum), so I don't know what explanations he suggests for the
apparent presence of this Transatlantic plant in Precolumbian Europe.
Alan
Hi Alan,
nice to see you back from holiday and fit for next word-fight. The best work
of the Professor is in my opinion his
"Die älteste Geschichte der Kulturpflanzen in Schweden: The oldest history
of cultivated plants in Sweden , 1955 ISSN 0006-8195
in regards of Lund his article from the 'Hulegrävningen' in the excavation
report "Frön och frukter från det äldsta Lund" is interesting.
Inger E
.
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