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Archive for the ‘Beetwixt & Beetween’ Category

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.

ap_3000yearoldbees

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.

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Meaning:

“Full of devices, crotchets, fancies, inventions, and dreamy theories. The connection between bees and the soul was once generally maintained: hence Mahomet admits bees to Paradise. Porphyry says of fountains, “they are adapted to the nymphs, or those souls which the ancients called bees.” The moon was called a bee by the priestesses of Ceres, and the word lunatic or moon-struck still means one with “bees in his head.”

More at: http://www.bartleby.com/81/1590.html

From: The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable pub. 1898 by E. Cobham Brewer (1810–1897)

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To be cranky; to have an idiosyncrasy; also, to carry a jewel or ornament in your cap. 

Thought to originate from the following poem:

“For pity, sir, find out that bee

That bore my love away – 

‘I’ll seek him in your bonnet brave…..”

Herrick: The Mad Maid’s Song.

From: http://www.bartleby.com/81/1590.html

Extracted from:  The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable pub. 1898 by E. Cobham Brewer (1810–1897)

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The Fable of the Bees: or, Private Vices, Publick Benefits consisted of a poem, The Grumbling Hive, or Knaves Turn’d Honest, along with an extensive prose commentary. The poem had appeared in 1705 and was intended as a commentary on England as Mandeville saw it

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A Spacious Hive well stock’d with Bees,

That lived in Luxury and Ease;

And yet as fam’d for Laws and Arms,

As yielding large and early Swarms;

Was counted the great Nursery

Of Sciences and Industry.

 

No Bees had better Government,

More Fickleness, or less Content.

They were not Slaves to Tyranny,

Nor ruled by wild Democracy;

But Kings, that could not wrong, because

Their Power was circumscrib’d by Laws.

 

The ‘hive’ is corrupt but prosperous, yet it grumbles about lack of virtue. A higher power decides to give them what they ask for:

 

But Jove, with Indignation moved,

At last in Anger swore, he’d rid

The bawling Hive of Fraud, and did.

The very Moment it departs,

And Honesty fills all their Hearts;

 

This results in a rapid loss of prosperity, though the newly-virtuous hive does not mind:


For many Thousand Bees were lost.

Hard’ned with Toils, and Exercise

They counted Ease it self a Vice;

Which so improved their Temperance;

That, to avoid Extravagance,

They flew into a hollow Tree,

Blest with Content and Honesty.

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De Mandeville’s most famous work, The Fable of the Bees, or Private Vices, Publick Benefits, came out in more than half a dozen editions beginning in 1714 (the poem The Grumbing Hive upon which it was based appeared in 1705) and became one of the most enduringly controversial works of the eighteenth century for its claims about the moral foundations of modern commercial society.

More at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fable_of_the_Bees

Text of the original poem:   http://pedagogie.ac-toulouse.fr/philosophie/textes/mandevillethefableofthebees.htm

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Like trains of cars on tracks of plush
I hear the level bee:
A jar across the flowers goes,
Their velvet masonry

Withstands until the sweet assault
Their chivalry consumes,
While he, victorious, tilts away
To vanquish other blooms.

His feet are shod with gauze,
His helmet is of gold;
His breast, a single onyx
With chrysoprase, inlaid.

His labor is a chant,
His idleness a tune;
Oh, for a bee’s experience
Of clovers and of noon!

 

By Emily Dickinson (1830-1886); Poetry, Series One, Chapter 3: Nature, Poem XV: The Bee

From: http://classiclit.about.com/library/bl-etexts/edickinson/bl-ed-3-15-thebee.htm

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“As busy as a bee.”

“What is good for the swarm is not good for the bee.”

“Where there is honey, there are bees.”

“One bee is better than a handful of flies.”

“If you want to gather honey, don’t kick over the beehive.”

“Honey turns sour.”

“The diligence of the hive produces the wealth of honey.”

“A drop of honey will not sweeten the ocean.”

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The proverbs are from Insect Fact and Folklore , by Lucy W. Clausen. Published by Collier Books, N.Y., 1954.

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For those interested, here is a great list of other Lores:

http://anglish.wikia.com/wiki/List_of_Lores

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Honeybees are clever little creatures. They can form abstract concepts, such as symmetry versus asymmetry, and they use symbolic language — the celebrated waggle dance — to direct their hivemates to flower patches. New reports suggest that they can also communicate across species, and can count — up to a point.

With colleagues, Songkun Su of Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China, and Shaowu Zhang of the Australian National University in Canberra managed to overcome the apian impulse to kill intruders and cultivated the first mixed-species colonies, made up of European honeybees, Apis mellifera, and Asiatic honeybees,A. cerana. The researchers confirmed that the two species have their own dialects: foraging in identical environments, the bees signaled the distance to a food source with dances of different durations.

Remarkably, despite the communication barrier, A. cerana decoded A. mellifera’s dance and found the food.

From: http://www.clipmarks.com/clipmark/AC3920A0-F84A-4A34-A1FD-02E2769308F6/

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A bee comb has six sides,

on each a magic thing it hides:

Take wax, pollen and a spoon of honey 

which will make you healthy and sunny

Try propolis, royal jelly or venom

and you’ll enjoy bee’s poem!

Adapted from: http://www.bee-hexagon.net/

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Blackstone Commentaries, Book II divides the entire animal kingdom into two classes.  Domesticated animals (ferae domitia) and wild (ferae naturae).   Wild animals are also divided into two classes — those free to roam at will and those which have been subjected to man’s dominion.

The honey bee that exists in the wild (lives in a tree cavity) is little different from the honey bee that lives within a man-made hive.   However, honey bees do swarm and thus are free to roam at will.  Honey bees do not trespass and the owner of property has no title to wild things using his property.  The owner of property can prevent others from coming onto his/her property and taking them and the property owner has a right to capture a swarm and hive it. Trespassing is a violation of the law and is enforceable.

“So long as bees remain in the hive of the claimant and on his premises or premises under his control, they are his.” (Supra.§ 5).

It is when they leave his/her hive and premises, as in swarming, that complications arise.  Case law has reflected the general idea that as long as the beekeeper keeps the swarm in sight and can identify them has his/hers, the beekeeper retains ownership of the bees. However, in getting the bees hived, one may be charged with trespassing.

From: http://www.gobeekeeping.com/LL%20lesson%20six.htm

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