Reading through some old threads I noticed some... err... 'spirited debate' on occasion, some of which revolved around the historical use of sharpening stones. So here, in case it's of interest to anyone, are some bits of history...
---
The world's oldest known whetting stone is at least 65,000 years old, and it's Australian. Aboriginal peoples at the time were easily the most advanced humans in the world, no other culture is known to have sharpened the edges of stone tools in this way for the next 20,000 years.
---
Oil has likely been used on sharpening stones for at least 6,000 years. This coincides with a rough estimation for the first cultivation of olives for production of oil in the Mediterranean, the oldest surviving oil amphorae date to around 3,500 BC.
The popularity of oil vs water more recently in Europe was probably actually dictated by geography as much as anything else. Most natural sharpening stones can be used well with either, and availability would have been the largest contributing factor to what was chosen. Sharpening stones from countries further north were more traditionally used with water, further south - with oil.
---
The first significant description of sharpening stones in western literature comes from Pliny's Natural History completed in 77AD, in which he makes a distinction between those used with oil, water, and saliva. Many of these stones are not clearly identifiable now, but we can see that even then the Turkish / Cretan oilstone was held in high regard.
---
(All that may not be of interest to anyone apart from me, but thought I'd put here just in case!)
---
The world's oldest known whetting stone is at least 65,000 years old, and it's Australian. Aboriginal peoples at the time were easily the most advanced humans in the world, no other culture is known to have sharpened the edges of stone tools in this way for the next 20,000 years.
---
Oil has likely been used on sharpening stones for at least 6,000 years. This coincides with a rough estimation for the first cultivation of olives for production of oil in the Mediterranean, the oldest surviving oil amphorae date to around 3,500 BC.
The popularity of oil vs water more recently in Europe was probably actually dictated by geography as much as anything else. Most natural sharpening stones can be used well with either, and availability would have been the largest contributing factor to what was chosen. Sharpening stones from countries further north were more traditionally used with water, further south - with oil.
---
The first significant description of sharpening stones in western literature comes from Pliny's Natural History completed in 77AD, in which he makes a distinction between those used with oil, water, and saliva. Many of these stones are not clearly identifiable now, but we can see that even then the Turkish / Cretan oilstone was held in high regard.
---
(All that may not be of interest to anyone apart from me, but thought I'd put here just in case!)