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Fork

Part of the collection: Metals

Popularization note

Fork A fruit fork from the collection of the Potoccy family, from the beginning of the 20th century, made of wood and metal. This tri-tine fruit fork has tines extending at their bases with pointy tips. The grip is veneered using nut wood (fixed by two rivets), straight and flat, with a trapezoidal metal end. The body is thicker, shaped like a trapeze. The Polish word ‘sztućce’ [cutlery] originates from the German term Stütze meaning „support”. Cutlery, meaning, all the various kinds of spoons, forks, belong to table dressing. They are used for the consumption of food and their manual preparation. Depending on their sizes and shapes, they are assigned to various meals served at the table. Forks were known already to ancient Greeks, the First Book of Samuel also describes them. Forks were also known in the Roman Empire (archeological findings revealed items from the 2nd century AD). In Europe forks were already used in the 10th century in Italy for eating spaghetti. They made their way to Poland in the 17th century (the 18th century saw the introduction of the two-tined fork). According to legend, when king Henry de Valois fled Poland, he took with himself a fork set, legend has it, seen for the first time, and brought them to France.

Information about the object

Information about this object Fork

Object type

Metals

Material

wood, metal

Creation time / dating

20th century

Owner

Castle Museum in Łańcut

Identification number

S.9433MŁ

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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