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Archive for the ‘Bee Lore’ Category

 (Author Unknown)

Once upon a time the animals had a school.
They had four subjects: running, climbing, flying, and swimming-
and all animals took all subjects.

The duck was good at swimming, better than the teachers in fact.
He made passing grades in running and flying,
but he was almost hopeless in climbing.
So they made him drop swimming to practice more climbing.
Soon he was only average in swimming.
But average is OK, and nobody worried much about it except the duck.

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The eagle was considered a troublemaker.
In his climbing class he beat everybody to the top of the tree,
but he had his own way of getting there, which was against the rules.
He always had to stay after school and write,
Cheating is wrong 500 times.
This kept him from soaring, which he loved.
But schoolwork comes first.

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The bear flunked because they said he was lazy, especially in winter.
His best time was summer, but school wasn’t open then.

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The penguin never went to school because he couldn’t leave home,
and they wouldn’t start a school out where he lived.

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The zebra played hooky –– a lot.
The ponies made fun of his stripes, and that made him very sad.

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The kangaroo started out at the top of the running class,
but got discouraged trying to run on all fours like the other kids.
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The fish quit school because he was bored.
To him all four subjects were the same, but nobody understood that.
They had never been a fish.

The squirrel got A’s in climbing,
but his flying teacher made him start from the ground up instead of the treetop down.
 His legs got so sore from practicing takeoffs that he began getting C’s and D’s in running.

But the bee was the biggest problem of all,
so the teacher sent him to Dr. Owl for testing.
Dr. Owl said that the bees wings were just too small for flying
and besides they were in the wrong place.
But the bee never saw Dr. Owls report,
so he just went ahead and flew anyway.

I think I know a bee or two, don’t you?

From: http://teachers.dadeschools.net/mmarcus/a_bee_story.htm

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Bees are symbols of communication. The saying ‘tell it to the bees’ meant using bees to transmit wishes and desires out to God/dess. Bees work in complete cooperation, communicating with each other so that their hive remains intact and productive. Bees in a dream may indicate a need for communication either with a group or with a significant other.

Honeybee pollen basket.JPG

From: http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art18072.asp

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Here is a rather beautiful plate of a medieval apiary from the Tacuinum Sanitatis – a medieval handbook on wellness.

Beekeeping, tacuinum sanitatis casanatensis (14th century)

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Robbing honey from wild bee colonies is one of the most ancient human activities and is still practiced by aboriginal societies in parts of Africa, Asia, Australia and South America. Some of the earliest evidence of gathering honey from wild colonies is from rock painting, dating to around 13,000 BC.

Honey seeker depicted on 6000 year old cave painting near Valencia, Spain

Robbing honey from wild bee colonies is usually done by subduing the bees with smoke and breaking open the tree or rocks where the colony is located, often resulting in the physical destruction of the colony.

From: http://www.answers.com/topic/beekeeping-1?cat=technology

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 “The bee wants always to remain within itself, to stay within the sphere of its own substance. Every external influence is felt as disturbing, as something to be warded off.”

Rudolf Steiner, 1923

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Napoleon I’s Coat of Arms contained the eagle and bee, emblems of the First and later Second Empire.

Used as a symbol of immortality and resurrection, the bee was chosen so as to link the new dynasty to the very origins of France.

Golden bees (in fact, cicadas) were discovered in 1653 in Tournai in the tomb of Childeric I, founder in 457 of the Merovingian dynasty They were considered as the oldest emblem of the sovereigns of France.

It is interesting to note how the bee was one of the main symbols for Ancient Egyptian Pharohs, The Merovingian dynasty and Napoleon’s Coat of Arms.  No other symbol (not even the Reed or the Eagle) has survived consistently as a regal symbol for such a long time!

More detail on other symbols on Napoleon’s coat of Arms can be found at: http://www.napoleon.org/en/essential_napoleon/symbols/index.asp#abeilles

See also my earlier entry: https://beelore.com/2007/12/23/the-merovingian-bee/

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According to Ancient Egyptian history (as written by the Egyptian historian Manetho, c305–285 BCE), Menes was the founder of the unified Egyptian state which combined Upper and Lower Egypt under a single monarchy.  Archaeologists now believe that it is likely that the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt occurred over the reigns of several First Dynasty kings, and that the legend of Menes was, perhaps, created at a much later date to represent all of those involved.

reed and bee

Prior to the unification, the Egyptian word nsw (he who belongs to the reed) was a symbol for Upper Egypt, and the word bit (he who belongs to the bee) was a symbol for Lower Egypt.   When Upper and Lower Egypt united, the two symbols together came to represent the Pharaoh of the United Egypt – a hyroglyph of which can be seen above.

From: http://africanhistory.about.com/od/egyptology/p/Menes.htm

See also: https://beelore.com/2007/08/24/tears-of-ra-the-sun-god/

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The cultivation of honey was a sacred charge often imbued with ritual symbolism and associated with the mother goddess, whose nurturing protection of mankind was symbolized by the the abundance of honey provided to bee society under the reign of the queen bee.

Minoan Bee Goddess
Bee-headed Goddess medallion, from Knossos, Crete, 1500 BCE

As it was widely believed that bees were born spontaneously, they were widely viewed as symbols of chastity and purity. The Bee’s never-flagging labors made them an emblem of hard work, industriousness, teamwork, perseverence, charity, selflessness, and constancy. These virtues are recalled in many heraldic emblems and personal seals, as well as in the emblems of Freemasonry, the Church of Latter-Day Saints, and in countless trademarks.


Masonic Beehive emblem

From: http://altreligion.about.com/library/glossary/symbols/bldefsbee.htm

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Humanity has always had a close relationship with bees, whose honey has have been a food staple since before the dawn of civilization. As a symbol, the bees’ lifestyle mimics that of the human social order- a cooperative, productive social hierarchy.

 In fact, beekeeping is one of the earliest markers of civilized society – bees provided many of the necessities of advancement, providing not only food, but wax for metalworking, cosmetics, and medicines, as well as the ever-important pollinization of fruit trees and other food crops.

From: http://altreligion.about.com/library/glossary/symbols/bldefsbee.htm

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A figure of a Minoan Goddess in the shape of a bee can be found below. 

 

The carving is assumed to be related to the local Mother Goddess cult and is believed to be a representation of one of the Melissae who were the priestesses of the cult.

Very little is known about Minoan religion on Crete because the civilisation came to an abrupt end – possibly due to a large tsunami from the catastrophic eruption of a nearby volcano on Santorini or Thera in 1,645 BC.

A similar religious structure has been found in Ancient Greece – and it is possible that the roots of the Greek Melissae from Delphi originate from the Minoan bee goddess cult – or that they each shared roots going further back in history.

From: http://altreligion.about.com/library/glossary/symbols/bldefsbeegoddess.htm

See also:

https://beelore.com/2007/07/22/the-oracle-at-delphi/

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