Ancient Roman feasts? Not for the commoners

Kristina Killgrove

The mandible of a 30-something man buried in Rome's Castellaccio Europarco cemetery in the Imperial Period shows signs of cavities and an abscess. The bones revealed a high proportion of millet in the man's diet.

By Stephanie Pappas
LiveScience

Ancient Romans are known for eating well, with mosaics from the empire portraying sumptuous displays of fruits, vegetables, cakes — and, of course, wine. But the 98 percent of Romans who were non-elite and whose feasts weren't preserved in art may have been stuck eating birdseed.

Common people in ancient Rome ate millet, a grain looked down upon by the wealthy as fit only for livestock, according to a new study published in the March issue of the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. And consumption of millet may have been linked to overall social status, with relatively poorer suburbanites eating more of the grain than did wealthier city dwellers.

The results come from an analysis of anonymous skeletons in the ancient city's cemeteries.

"We don't know anything about their lives, which is why we're trying to use biochemical analysis to study them," said study leader Kristina Killgrove, an anthropologist at the University of West Florida.

The ancient Mediterranean diet
Health studies out last week heralded the modern Mediterranean diet, rich in olive oil, fish and nuts, as a good way to avoid heart disease. In ancient Rome, however, diet varied based on social class and where a person lived.

Kristina Killgrove

The bones of a Roman toddler from the Casal Bertone Mausoleum suggest that the 18-month old was in the process of weaning when he or she died.

Ancient texts have plenty to say about lavish Roman feasts. The wealthy could afford exotic fruits and vegetables, as well as shellfish and snails. A formal feast involved multiple dishes, eaten from a reclined position, and could last for hours.

But ancient Roman writers have less to say about the poor, other than directions for landowners on the appropriate amount to feed slaves, who made up about 30 percent of the city's population. Killgrove wanted to know more about lower-class individuals and what they ate. [Photos: Gladiators of the Roman Empire]

To find out, she and her colleagues analyzed portions of bones from the femurs of 36 individuals from two Roman cemeteries. One cemetery, Casal Bertone, was located right outside the city walls. The other, Castellaccio Europarco, was farther out, in a more suburban area.

The skeletons date to the Imperial Period, which ran from the first to the third century A.D., during the height of the Roman Empire. At the time, Killgrove told LiveScience, between 1 million and 2 million people lived in Rome and its suburbs.

Kristina Killgrove

A skull fragment from a teen buried at Rome's Casal Bertone necropolis. The teen ate a millet-heavy diet in childhood but switched to wheat in the years before death. Pores in the bone of the eye socket known as cribra orbitalia suggest the teen was anemic.

Roman locavores
To determine diets from the Roman skeletons, the researchers analyzed the bones for isotopes of carbon and nitrogen. Isotopes are atoms of an element with different numbers of neutrons, and are incorporated into the body from food. Such isotopes of carbon can tell researchers which types of plants people consumed. Grasses such as wheat and barley are called C3 plants; they photosynthesize differently than mostly fibrous C4 plants, such as millet and sorghum. The differences in photosynthesis create different ratios of carbon isotopes preserved in the bones of the people who ate the plants.

Nitrogen isotopes, on the other hand, give insight into the kinds of protein sources people ate.

"We found that people were eating very different things," Killgrove said. Notably, ancient Italians were locavores. Compared with people living on the coasts, for example, the Romans ate less fish.

There were also differences among people living within Rome. Individuals buried in the mausoleum at Casa Bertone (a relatively high-class spot, at least for commoners), ate less millet than those buried in the simple cemetery surrounding Casa Bertone's mausoleum. Meanwhile, those buried in the farther-flung Castellaccio Europarco cemetery ate more millet than anyone at Casa Bertone, suggesting they were less well-off than those living closer to or within the city walls.

Historical texts dismiss millet as animal feed or a famine food, Killgrove said, but the researcher's findings suggest that plenty of ordinary Romans depended on the easy-to-grow grain. One man, whose isotope ratios showed him to be a major millet consumer, was likely an immigrant, later research revealed. He may have been a recent arrival to Rome when he died, carrying the signs of his country diet with him. Or perhaps he kept eating the food he was used to, even after arriving in the city.

"There's still a lot to learn about the Roman Empire," Killgrove said. "We kind of think that it's been studied and studied to death over the last 2,000 years, but there are thousands of skeletons in Rome that nobody has studied. … This can give us information about average people in Rome we don't know about from historical records."

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Discuss this post

Wow, it's almost like Hollywood got it wrong with all those portrayals of Roman times. Who would believe it? The next thing you know, maybe someone will suggest that Cleopatra didn't actually look very much like Elizabeth Taylor.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Fri Mar 1, 2013 2:05 PM EST

Dont be rediculous ... Elizabeth could pass for Greek and Cleopatra was Greek soooooooo.....

    #1.1 - Fri Mar 1, 2013 8:14 PM EST

    Funny that the researchers missed this very important documentary on Roman life. It would have saved them a lot of trouble.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3B1IQYD4Uew

    There are some things that have always been and will never change.

      #1.2 - Mon Mar 11, 2013 2:42 PM EDT
      Reply

      South East Asia is not known for fish conservation. Of course the sharks are going to look for safer areas to live.

        Reply#2 - Fri Mar 1, 2013 7:50 PM EST

        A grain based diet is supposed to be healthier especially as far as cardiovascular health. I wonder what the lifespan of the average Roman was?

          Reply#3 - Wed Mar 6, 2013 4:18 PM EST

          According to a study just completed on 137 preserved mummies spanning 4,000 years, from different parts of the world, cardiovascular health may not be so tied in with diet after all. All showed hardening of the arteries, despite what would be consideree primative healthy diets. It is opening up the new perception such disease may just be a part of getting older.A grain based diet does seem to reduce digestive and weight associated diseases howeverl.

          On the other hand, there are problems heath-wise, which come from being rich, which the poor don't have to worry about.For eating utensils, and dinner ware made from lead undoubtedly led to poisoning. Affected not just organs, but even the next generations potential.Poor folks simply couldn't afford anything but the pottery commonly fired,iron,stone and wooden implements.Even glass was often out of reach for most.

          The average life expectancy for a roman was 25.Given the high mortality rate for infants and children. But if you survived childhood and the teenage years, you good very well do much better, depending on social class. According to research, the rich could live into their sixties and beyond, while the poor struggle to live into their forties, due to the harshness of life.

          • 1 vote
          Reply#4 - Tue Mar 12, 2013 8:02 PM EDT

          This kind of story is very interesting. Feeding the masses in Rome was always a concern. There was a long tradition of the elite providing bread for the poor for instance. It would not surprise me that citizens would have to consume millet in times of need. Especially in the 3rd Century when Imperial Rome was well established feeding the whole city would be quite an undertaking.

            Reply#5 - Thu Mar 14, 2013 10:02 AM EDT
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