Tablecloths were originally meant to serve as towels with which guests could wipe their hands and faces after dinner.
Tablecloths Were Originally Meant for Wiping Your Face
Next time you admire a pristine white tablecloth at a fancy dinner, remember this: that elegant fabric was once considered fair game for wiping greasy fingers and sauce-covered faces. Medieval diners didn't have individual napkins—they had one giant communal cloth draped across the table, and everyone used it.
The history of table linens is messier than you might think. Long before Emily Post dictated proper napkin etiquette, tablecloths served double duty as both furniture protection and cleaning station.
The Ancient Roots of Tabletop Wiping
The Romans had the right idea with their mappae—smaller cloths related to the main tablecloth that diners used to clean themselves during meals. Think of them as personal napkins, except still connected to the whole table linen concept. Meanwhile, the Spartans opted for an even more creative solution: they used pieces of dough called apogmadalie to wipe food off their hands and faces. Edible napkins. Genius or gross? You decide.
By 103 AD, the poet Martial was writing about tablecloths being used to "sop up spills and keep the tables generally clean." But let's be honest—when you're eating a whole roasted boar with your hands, "spills" is putting it mildly.
Medieval Feasts: Peak Tablecloth Era
During medieval times, massive communal feasts were the norm, and so were the tablecloths. These weren't dainty little runners—they were long, flowing fabrics that draped across wooden tables, protecting the surface while simultaneously serving as the era's version of wet wipes.
White tablecloths became the ultimate status symbol during the Middle Ages. Why? Because keeping white fabric white required an army of servants doing endless laundry. If you could afford spotless linens despite everyone using them as hand towels, you were clearly loaded.
The ewerer—essentially the medieval hand-washing coordinator—carried a towel specifically for the lord and honored guests. Everyone else? They made do with the communal tablecloth or, if things got really casual, their own clothing.
When Napkins Disappeared
Here's a weird twist: during the early Middle Ages, individual napkins actually disappeared from formal table settings. People wiped their hands and mouths on whatever was available—the tablecloth, their sleeves, even pieces of bread. Hygiene standards were... flexible.
It wasn't until later centuries that individual napkins made a comeback and eventually replaced the communal tablecloth-as-towel system. Today, using the tablecloth to wipe your mouth would get you some serious side-eye at any dinner party.
From Function to Fashion
Modern tablecloths are purely decorative or protective. We've got dedicated napkins, paper towels, and hand sanitizer for the cleanup work. But for centuries, that fancy fabric covering the table was the original multi-tasker—catching spills, protecting furniture, and serving as the medieval world's most-used hand towel.
So the next time someone tells you not to wipe your hands on the tablecloth, you can explain that you're just honoring a time-tested tradition. They probably still won't let you do it, but at least you'll have historical precedent on your side.