Archeologists digging in northern Israel have discovered evidence of a 3,000-year-old beekeeping industry, including remnants of ancient honeycombs, beeswax and what they believe are the oldest intact beehives ever found.
An archeologist examining the remnants of 3,000-year-old beehives found at Rehov. (AP)
The findings in the ruins of the city of Rehov include 30 intact hives dating to around 900 B.C.E., archaeologist Amihai Mazar of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem told The Associated Press. He sad it offers unique evidence that an advanced honey industry existed in the Holy Land at the time of the Bible.
Beekeeping was widely practiced in the ancient world, where honey used for medicinal and religious purposes as well as for food, and beeswax was used to make molds for metal and to create surfaces to write on. While portrayals of bees and beekeeping are known in ancient artwork, nothing similar to the Rehov hives has ever been found before, Mazar said.
The beehives, made of straw and unbaked clay, have a hole at one end of allw the bees in and out and a lid the other end to allow beekeepers access to the honeycombs inside. They were found in orderly rows, three high, in a room that could have accommodated around 100 hives, Mazar said.
The Bible repeatedly refers to Israel as a land of milk and honey, but that’s believed to refer to honey made from dates and figs – there is no mention of honeybee cultivation. But the new find shows that the Holy Land was home to a highly developed beekeeping industry nearly 3,000 years ago.
“You can tell that this was an organized industry, part of an organized economy, in an ultra-organized city,” Mazar said.
At the time the beehives were in use, Mazar believes Rehov had around 2,000 residents, a mix of Israelites, Canaanites and others.
Ezra Marcus, an expert on the ancient Mediterranean world at Haifa University, said the finding was a unique glimpse into ancient beekeeping. Marcus was not involved in the Rehov excavation.
“We have seen depictions of beekeeping in texts and ancient art from the Near East, but this is the first time we’ve been able to actually feel and see the industry,” Marcus said.
The finding is especially unique, Marcus said, because of its location in the middle of a thriving city – a strange place for thousands of bees.
“This might have been because the city’s ruler wanted the industry under his control,” Marcus said, or because the beekeeping industry was linked to residents’ religious practices, as might be indicated by an altar decorated with fertility figurines that archaeologists found alongside the hives”.
More at: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/900809.html and other news articles at the time.
Source from Associated Press September 2007.
This is a fascinating story – it makes me consider the possibility that the keeping of bees could have been kept a guarded secret? – If there is no mention of the actual keeping of bees but plenty about honey . .. then beekeeping as an initiatory guild of some sort? I got referred here by a friend on another blog when I mentioned the beehive’s importance as a symbol in the rank of Master Mason –
If the bee’s alchemy of honey creation were considered sacred knowledge that could bee another source of bees being so rich with symbolism up to today?/??
I love this article. Such rich history in that area of the world. I love my bees and I love to read about the history of beekeeping .. what I can find. I could imagine bc thieves and some croppers that still thought bees ate the plants instead of pollinated them would either steal or destroy their apiary so in certain areas beekeeping was kind of a secret. It’s amazing they had developed a hive with a removable lid in history so many people used skeps and destroyed them to get the honey. They were advanced. It’s funny how in 2021 we use equipment from the 1800s langstroth boxes. I always wondered why beekeeping had not came further. I invent all kinds of things for my bees and build their hives. The bees will be my life’s work. Thanks for the read