Banquet. A banquet is a formal large meal where a number of people consume food together.
   Banquets are traditionally held to enhance the prestige of a host, or reinforce social bonds among joint contributors. Modern examples of these purposes include a charitable gathering, a ceremony, or a celebration.
   They often involve speeches in honor of the topic or guest of honour. The older English term for a lavish meal was a feast, and banquet originally meant a specific and different kind of meal, often following a feast, but in a different room or even building, which concentrated on sweet foods of various kinds.
   These became highly fashionable as sugar became much more common in Europe at the start of the 16th century. It was a grand form of the dessert course, and special banqueting houses, often on the roof or in the grounds of large houses, were built for them.
   Such meals are also called a sugar collation. Banquets feature luxury foods, often including animal meat. Feasts can be divided into two fundamental types: solidarity and promotional. Solidarity feasts are a joint effort in which families or communities bring equivalent contributions together to reinforce the social ties of all concerned. Promotional feasts are intended to enhance the social status of the host, who provides the food in order to create obligations to themselves among the guests. Communal feasting is evidenced from
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