Quern-stones are a pair of stone tools for hand grinding a wide variety of materials. The lower, stationary, stone is called a quern, whilst the upper, mobile, stone is called a handstone.
As well as grain, ethnographic evidence and Mesopotamian texts shows that a wide range of materials were processed using stone querns or mortars, including nuts, seeds, fruit, vegetables, herbs, spices, meat, bark, pigments, temper and clay (Wright 1992:87f). Moreover, one study analysing quern-stones noted that a number of querns had traces of arsenic and bismuth, unlike their source rocks, and had levels of antimony which were ten times higher than those of the rocks (Lease et al 2001:235). They concluded that this was probably due to the use of these querns in the preparation of medicines, cosmetics, dyes or even in the manufacture of alloys.
There are however, more surprising recorded uses of quern-stones. For example, DeBoer (2001:223), in his review of the traditional gambling games of North American tribes, reports that one of the games involved bouncing a group of split canes off a quern. A further example is recorded in the book of Judges (9:53; NRSV): “But a certain woman threw an upper-millstone on Abimelech’s head, and crushed his skull.”
Rutter (2003) was able to show, for the southern Levant, that basalt quern-stones were preferred to those manufactured from other rock types. Basalt quern-stones were therefore transported over long-distances, leading Rutter (2003:236) to argue that, despite their every-day, utilitarian function, they were also used as a status symbol.
As the name implies, the rotary quern used circular motions to grind the material, meaning both the quern and the handstone were generally circular.
Other forms of quern-stone include hopper-rubbers and Pompeian mills, both used by the Romans.
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