Kitchen
forks trace their origins back to the time of the Greeks. These forks were
fairly large with two tines that aided in the carving and serving of meat. The
tines prevented meat from twisting or moving during carving and allowed food to
slide off more easily than it would with a knife.
By the 7th Century A.D., royal courts of the Middle East
began to use forks at the table for dining. From the 10th through the 13th
Centuries, forks were fairly common among the wealthy in Byzantium, and in the
11th Century, a Byzantine wife of a Doge of Venice brought forks to Italy. The
Italians, however, were slow to adopt their use. It was not until the 16th
Century that forks were widely adopted in Italy.
In
1533, forks were brought from Italy to France when Catherine de Medicis married
the future King Henry II. The French, too, were slow to accept forks, because
using them was thought to be an affectation.
An Englishman named Thomas Coryate brought the first
forks back toiEngland after seeing
them in Italy during his travels in 1608.
The English ridiculed forks as being effeminate and
unnecessary. "Why should a person need a fork when God had given him hands?"
they asked. Slowly, however, forks came to be adopted by the wealthy. They were
prized possessions made of expensive materials intended to impress guests. Small,
slender-handled forks with two tines were generally used for sweet, sticky foods
or for food (like mulberries) which was likely to stain the fingers. By the mid
1600s, eating with forks like those to the right was considered fashionable
among the wealthy British. Forks used solely for dining were luxuries and thus
markers of social status and sophistication among nobles.
Early
table forks were modeled after kitchen forks; two fairly long and widely spaced
tines ensured that meat would not twist while being cut. This
style of fork was soundly designed, but small pieces of food regularly fell
through the tines or slipped off easily. In late 17th Century
France, larger forks with four curved tines were developed. The additional tines
made diners less likely to drop food, and the curved tines served as a scoop so
people did not have to constantly switch to a spoon while eating. By the early
19th Century, four-tined forks like the ones pictured to the left had also been
developed in Germany and England and slowly began to spread to America.