Photo by: Hebrew University
The team, headed by HU archeology Prof. Amihai Mazar, found a total of 30 intact hives in the ruins of the city of Tel Rehov, dating back to 900 BCE, as well as evidence that there had been 100-200 hives made of straw and unbaked clay.
Three millennia ago, the joint Israelite-Canaanite settlement had 2,000 residents.
The hives, lined up in an orderly way, may be the earliest complete beehives ever discovered and offer a glimpse of ancient beekeeping during biblical times.
The team of archeologists and biologists was surprised that bee remnants had been found in an urban setting.
The existence of cultivated bees in the center of the city was especially odd, as bees usually get angry when the hive is opened to remove honey, and could have stung residents.
After the conclusion of the dig in 2007, the bee remnants were sent by Mazar – who received the Israel Prize in archeology last year – to Prof. Guy Bloch, an expert in the behavior and evolution of bees in the university’s department of evolution, systematics and ecology.
Bloch conducted a study in which he found clear evidence that the beehives were ancient and had turned into carbon due to the passage of millennia. Their external structure was very rigid, but remnants of bee larvae and pupae enveloped a soft body.
About 17 remnants of wings and dozens of legs were also found. The results of the study were published this month in the journal PNAS (Proceedings of the [UN] National Academy of Science).
With help from experts in Germany and Brazil, the researchers sought to identify the bee species. To their surprise, the bees were determined to have been different from the local Syrian species, which was prevalent in biblical times in the Land of Israel, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. They were also different from Egyptian bees, which were in the South, and from the Persian bee, which was prevalent in the North and Northeast.
The HU researchers and their foreign colleagues concluded that the species found in the Beit She’an Valley was similar to the Anatalyan bee, found in central Turkey. Thus, the question became: How did these bees reach the Land of Israel? One possible explanation is that the distribution of bee varieties 3,000 years ago was different than it is today, even though the researchers found no scientific evidence of this. The other explanation is that the Tel Rehov beekeepers imported their bees from elsewhere in the Mediterranean basin.
Syrian bees are aggressive and irascible, said Bloch.
The Beit She’an Valley digs also showed evidence of widespread commerce with lands in the eastern Mediterranean, as well as techniques for transferring bees in large pottery vases or portable hives. An Assyrian stamp from the 8th century BCE provided evidence that the bees had been brought 400 km. south from the Taurus Mountains in southern Turkey – a distance that was just slightly shorter than that between Taurus and Tel Rehov. Thus, the import of “docile” bees apparently was a solution for the beekeepers of the Land of Israel.
After attempts to raise local bees for the production of honey resulted in mass stinging, the Turkish bees were apparently the solution, Bloch said. He concluded that while it had long been believed that a “land flowing with milk and honey” referred to date honey, the fact that there was a commercial- sized honeybee industry in urban areas here showed the financial importance of beekeeping during the biblical period.