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A swineherd was responsible for pigs, from their birth to death. Many people kept small numbers of pigs and would tend them themselves, but a nobleman might keep a large group of pigs and employ a swineherd to feed and look after them.

Piglets would be born during March and the swineherd would check that each was fit and healthy and feeding from its mother - any sick piglets or runts would go straight to the kitchen as a delicacy for the nobleman's table.

Pigs were among the cheapest animals to feed, since for part of the year they would be turned out into woodland to forage for acorns and roots; many calendars show swineherds knocking the acorns from the late summer and autumn trees for their pigs to feast on.

The month of November saw the start of slaughtering of cattle and pigs for the lord's table. The swineherd would have to select the best animals for slaughter, which in the case of pigs was always done with the back of a heavy axe. The carcass would be bled and then thrown onto a small fire to singe off the stiff bristles from the skin of the pig. The swineherd then washed the carcass before delivering it to the cook in the manorial kitchen.

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13y ago

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