| Literature DB >> 33121508 |
Ingvar Svanberg1, Alison Locker2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fishing is probably one of the oldest economic activities in the history of humankind. Lakes, rivers and streams in Europe are important elements in the European landscape with a rich diversity of fish and other aquatic organisms. Artisanal fisheries have therefore been of great importance for the provision of food, but also animal feed, medicine, fertilizer and other needs. These fishermen had a deep knowledge about the waterscape and its biota. However, ethnoichthyology remains a small topic within contemporary ethnobiology in Europe. Our focus lies within northern Europe in the late medieval to modern period, but encompasses the wider area with some reference to earlier periods where informative.Entities:
Keywords: Archaeozoology; Ethnozoology; Fishing culture; Fishing practices; Fishponds; Folk biology; Foraging activities; Human nutrition; Human-animal relationship
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33121508 PMCID: PMC7597041 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-020-00410-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Fig. 1Fishing gear used by local farmers in a stream outside Uppsala in the early twentieth century. It was an illegal fishing method when the photo was taken by Ivar Arwidsson. However, the local villagers still used it at least once a year (Courtesy: Nordic Museum, Stockholm)
Fish mentioned in the text
| River lamprey | |
| Sturgeon (European) | |
| Eel (European) | |
| Herring (Atlantic) | |
| Baltic herring | |
| Sprat (European) | |
| Shad | |
| European whitefish, powan | |
| Vendace | |
| Atlantic salmon | |
| Brown trout (and sea trout) | |
| Rainbow trout | |
| King salmon | |
| Red salmon (sockeye) | |
| Chum salmon | |
| Silver salmon (coho) | |
| Pink salmon | |
| Grayling | |
| Arctic char | |
| Huchen (Danube salmon) | |
| Smelt (European) | |
| Pike (Northern) | |
| European mudminnow | |
| Common carp | |
| Crucian carp | |
| Goldfish | |
| Tench | |
| Bream | |
| Vimba bream | |
| Bleak | |
| Barbel | |
| Andalusian barbel | |
| Gudgeon | |
| Nase | |
| Bitterling | |
| Asp | |
| Dace | |
| Ide | |
| Chub | |
| Minnow | |
| Roach | |
| Sunbleak | |
| Topmouth gudgeon | |
| Weatherfish | |
| Stone loach | |
| Wels | |
| Cod (Atlantic) | |
| Burbot | |
| Ling | |
| Three-spined stickleback | |
| Perch (European) | |
| Ruffe | |
| Pike-perch (Zander) | |
| Nile Tilapia | |
| Flounder | |
| Paradise fish | |
| Siamese fighting fish | |
| Mosquito fish | |
| Blue fin tuna | |
Source: FishBase.org
Fig. 2Fish bones of burbot, Lota lota (L.), from the Swedish warship Vasa that sank during its maiden voyage in 10 August 1628. Among the provisions for the crew on-board were dried and salted fish, whose bones have been identified to species thus giving as a good insight in popular food fish within the navy in the seventeenth century. Burbot is still eaten in early spring in Sweden (Photo: Kristin Ytterborg, The Vasa Museum, Stockholm)
Fig. 3Russian children fishers. Engraving by A.I. Zubchaninov, drawing by A.P. Koverznev, 1875 (From Vsemirnaya Illyustratsia 1875)
Fig. 4Fisherman with a cast net in the village Neppendorf (Turnișor) near Hermannstadt (Sibiu), Siebenbürgen, Roumania, in 1915 (Courtesy Museums of World Culture, Stockholm)
Fig. 5A Pákász family camp in a Hungarian swamp. They were living as fisher-foragers on the marsh-land of the Nagy-Sárrét region (From O. Herman, A Magyar halászat könyve, 1887)
Fig. 6Coat of arms for Oder Welse in Germany. Fish are common on European (including Russian) coats of arms for villages, cities and provinces. Common freshwater fish species depicted are salmon, whitefish, pike, barbel, eel, and lamprey
Fig. 7Fishing for smelt in Norrström, Stockholm, in front of the Royal Castle in 1945. This view was well-known to people in the city since medieval times and lasted until 2016, when the last smelt boats were sold (Photo Lennart af Petersens, Courtesy Stockholm City Museum)
Fig. 8Night fishing with a traditional lift net at Sindret, Värmland, in April 2019. This gear was used only a few kilometres from where Linnaeus made a similar drawing in 1746, c.f. Fig. 9 (Photo Armas Jäppinen)
Fig. 9Lift net for smelt fishing observed and sketched by Linnaeus in Persberg, eastern Värmland, in 1746 (Source Carl Linnaeus, Wästgötha Resa, 1747)
Fig. 10Vimba bream (Vimba vimba) captured with nets and by hand in a stream at Strömsberg in Finland 1926 (Photo Curt Segerstråle, The Society of Swedish Literature in Finland, Helsinki)
Fig. 11Stunning burbot, Lota lota, through the thin ice with an axe (From Olaus Magnus, Historia de gentibus septemtrionalibus, 1555)
Fig. 12Some old-style fishing techniques have survived until today. Here is a man stunning burbot, through the thin ice with a bludgeon, c.f. Fig. 11 (Photo Hilding Mickelsson 1972, Hälsinglands Museum, CC-BY-NC)
Other organisms mentioned in the text
| Black throated diver | |
| Red-throated diver | |
| Great crested grebe | |
| Cormorant | |
| Red-breasted merganser | |
| Goosander | |
| White-tailed eagle | |
| Osprey | |
| Eurasian otter | |
| Dog | |
| European Crayfish | |
| White-clawed crayfish | |
| American signal crayfish | |
| Medicinal leech | |
| Swan mussel | |
| Thick shelled river mussel | |
| Fresh-water pearl mussel | |
| Mullein | |
| Irish spurge | |
| Henbane | |
| Walnut | |
| Flax-leaved daphne | |
| Common leadwort | |
| Villious deadly carrot | |
| Lancepod | |
| Common reed | |
| Club-rush |
Source GBIF | Global Biodiversity Information Facility (www.gbif.org)
Fig. 13An old fishpond of medieval origin still stocked with fish at the Manor House, Long Clawson, Leicestershire, England (Photo Nicholas Redman, 2012)
Fig. 14Otter assisting his master in fishing (Olaus Magnus Carta Marina, 1539)
Fig. 15Fishing for crayfish in the 1890s. Painting by Carl Larsson (From C. Larsson, Ett hem, 1897)