The Boyertown Area Times

‘Pass the salt, please’

- Carole Christman Koch Welcome To My World

I don’t recall a time in my growing up years on the farm, or as an adult, whether eating out or at home, that I didn’t’ hear someone ask, “Pass the salt, please.” I always accepted this seasoning in our salt shaker, as part of a table setting. Yet, since ancient days, salt played a prominent role in many different cultures, in helping to bring it to our kitchen table.

The earliest known salt works comes from Lake Yuncheng, in China, around 6000 BC. Also from China is a documented history on salt, the Peng-Tzao-Kan-Mu, around 2700 BC, in a treatise on pharmacolo­gy, where more than 40 kinds of salt are discussed.

The Egyptians, as early as 2800 BC, practiced a 70-day mummificat­ion of the dead, using a salt called Natron, referred to as “divine salt.” Funeral offerings for the afterlife in the tombs, consisted of salted fish, birds, vegetables, and even jars of salt.

During ancient days, the currency was different in each country, but salt was used as a method of trade and currency. The Greek slave traders exchanged salt for slaves, giving rise to the expression, “Not worth his salt.” Hippocrate­s (460-370 BC), the Greek physician, encouraged other doctors to heal ailments by immersing their patients in salt water.

Roman soldiers were once paid a special allowance, along with their wages. This ration of “salt money” was called salarium argentum, from which the word salary was derived. Our word salad also comes from salt, when the Romans salted their leafy greens and vegetables.

Both the old and new testaments have more than 30 references to salt. Mosaic law called for salt to be added to all burnt animal offerings, “because salt represents the covenant between you and God.” Jesus told his disciples, “Ye are the salt of the earth.” This expression is used today to describe someone who is valuable.

The production and transport of salt gave rise to names of cities, the constructi­on of roads, and even wars.

The earliest salt mines in Europe were found in Austria--Halstatt and Salzburg, both meaning “salt towns.” Salzburg’s 4 salt mines are a major tourist attraction. Several places in England, with the suffix wich and wych, (place of salt), are named Middlewich, Northwich, Leftwich, and Nantwich.

During the early years of the Roman Republic, roads were needed to transport salt. One such road was the Via Salaria (salt route) that led from Rome to the Adriatic Sea.

The United States, between 1790 and 1860, had salt producing states in Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri. Salt had a longer history in Syracuse, (called Salt City), New York, as early as 1654.. Records of Jesuit missionari­es reported salty brine springs at the southern end of “Salt Lake” known today as Onondaga Lake. In those early days, salt was transporte­d through rivers and lakes, which was slow and expensive, at least until the Erie Canal was completed in 1825. The canal became known as “the ditch that salt built,” because the salt revenue tax paid for half of the constructi­on.

Due to the necessity for salt, government­s monopolize­d and created heavy taxes on salt, even creating wars.

The first known tax on salt was by the Chinese Emperor Hsia Yu when salt contribute­d to building the Great Wall, from 214 BC.

In France, it was the unscrupulo­us gabelle salt tax, enacted in 1286 until 1790. This tax, among others, and the scarcity of salt contribute­d and ignited the French Revolution.

In 1930, Mahatma Gandhi protested the British rule of the high tax on salt in India. He led a 200 mile trek to collect untaxed salt from the ocean for the poor. For years, British monarchy was supported by high salt taxes, which led to the illicit traffickin­g of the salt.

The U.S. wasn’t exempt from salt wars either. During the Revolution­ary War (1775-1783), the British intercepte­d salt shipments to the New World to prevent the ability to preserve foods. In 1777, British Commander Howe successful­ly captured Gen’l George Washington’s supply of salt.

During the War of 1812 with England, salt brine was used to pay our soldiers, because the government didn’t’ have the money to pay them.

Salt also played an important role in the Civil War (1861-1865). The production of salt in Syracuse, New York, freed the northern states of salt problems. Syracuse, since it was close to the Erie Canal, (completed in 1825), transporte­d clothing, food, and arms to help the war effort, but salt was the most important. In 1862, Syracuse shipped 9 million bushels of salt through the Erie Canal to help troops, who needed salt in their diets and to preserve foods. The Union, in 1864, fought a 36 hour battle to capture, Saltville, Virginia, a salt producing plant, that was very much needed by the Confederat­e troops on the march, as salted foods last a long time.

Now you know about the history of salt, I’ll head back to Medieval Europe to finally get salt to the kitchen table.

Salt, as we know it, comes in a shaker, but for centuries in Europe, it was served in a bowl, because it absorbed moisture and stuck together.

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