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Confections of the English Renaissance span a wide range of products. All were heavily based on sugar, which was a relatively new development. Many were considered to have medicinal properties – a belief that was influenced by the Arabic use of sugar as a medicine and that carried over from medieval sugar usage. In the mid-sixteenth century, sugar became cheaper and more widely available to the general populace due to European colonization of the New World. It began to be used more as a flavouring, preservative, and sweetener, as it is today, rather than as medicine.

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  • Confectionery in the English Renaissance (en)
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  • Confections of the English Renaissance span a wide range of products. All were heavily based on sugar, which was a relatively new development. Many were considered to have medicinal properties – a belief that was influenced by the Arabic use of sugar as a medicine and that carried over from medieval sugar usage. In the mid-sixteenth century, sugar became cheaper and more widely available to the general populace due to European colonization of the New World. It began to be used more as a flavouring, preservative, and sweetener, as it is today, rather than as medicine. (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Gallipot,_England,_probably_London,_c._1760,_tin-glazed_earthenware,_HD_91.150_-_Flynt_Center_of_Early_New_England_Life_-_Deerfield,_Massachusetts_-_DSC04326.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Pizzelle_filled_with_orange-almond_creme,_April_2011.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Banquet_for_King_Charles_II_of_England_in_his_The_Hague_residence_the_Mauritshuis,_19_February_1660.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Refined_sugar_V1.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Слатко_од_дуњa.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Sugar_coated_fennel_seeds_(5565069484).jpg
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  • Confections of the English Renaissance span a wide range of products. All were heavily based on sugar, which was a relatively new development. Many were considered to have medicinal properties – a belief that was influenced by the Arabic use of sugar as a medicine and that carried over from medieval sugar usage. In the mid-sixteenth century, sugar became cheaper and more widely available to the general populace due to European colonization of the New World. It began to be used more as a flavouring, preservative, and sweetener, as it is today, rather than as medicine. (en)
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