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Lot n° 9

Mortar; 18th century. Bronze. Preserves mace. Damaged. Measurements:...

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Mortar; 18th century. Bronze. Preserves mace. Damaged. Measurements: 8 x 13 cm; 20 x 4 cm (mallet). The mortar and pestle that make up this lot are made of bronze, a resistant and stable material that is very suitable for the manufacture of this type of utensil. In ancient recipe books there are many recipes based on the use of the pestle and mortar, a tool which is rarely used nowadays, but which in the past was so varied in its use that every kitchen had a wide variety of them, from the larger ones for pounding meat and vegetables to the smaller ones for grinding spices. Even in antiquity, there were large mortars made of bronze for crushing and mixing marble or lime, which were used to make construction binders or plaster, such as stucco. The Roman poet Juvenal mentioned it in articles for the preparation of drugs, reflecting the early use of this instrument in apothecaries. The antiquity of mortars is also well documented in some works of ancient literature, such as the Egyptian Ebers Papyrus, dating from 1550 BC, which is considered one of the oldest documents on medicine in Ancient Egypt. It is also mentioned in the Old Testament. Good mortars must be heavy or made of strong materials to withstand prolonged pounding and thus reduce the substances to powder. The mortar must not be brittle as it would break during the pulverising operation. The material must also be cohesive so that it does not wear off its surface and mix with the ingredients.