written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Saturday, 22 May 2021

Linear Bee

I hope the title raised either a smile or a quizzical eyebrow. The keeping of bees and the importance of honey have been central to Greek culture for millennia. We know this partly from decipherment of inscriptions in an ancient language designated as Linear B (an early form of Greek script). As both bees and the script feature prominently in this week's blog, I thought Linear Bee would make an appropriately punning header.

Apiculture (bee-keeping) has a long history in the Aegean. The ancients believed that bees were messengers from the Gods, intermediaries between heaven and earth, and that honey was a source of wisdom and poetry. The Minoans had a bee goddess, Potnia, and her priestesses were called Melissa (which means bee, from meli the word for honey). In later Greek mythology, Aristaeus was the god of bee-keeping.

By 600 BC bee-keeping was a fully developed and legally regulated concern in Greece and honey was valued not only as a food, the first natural sweetener and good source of energy, but also for its medicinal properties (both taken internally and used as a salve) and - in the form of beeswax - as a cosmetic in beauty masks. The great Koan doctor Hippocrates regarded honey as a panacea and the philosopher Aristotle wrote his first book on the art of keeping the little fellows.

There is even a Greek bee, apis mellifera cecropia , a sub-species of honey bee, favoured for its extreme gentleness and lack of a tendency to swarm. It thrives in the southern Mediterranean climate, for it likes the warmth and low humidity, and is not suited to the cooler climate of northern Europe.

Greece, in fact, has more beehives per acre than any other country in Europe. The wide biodiversity of its flora combined with powerful summer sun means its varieties of honey are dense, rich and among the finest.

a colony of colourful Greek hives
There are six main types: Thyme honey (the most highly thought of) produced from the thyme flowers of Crete and Kythera in spring; Blossom honey from wild flowers and orange groves in Halkidiki; Chestnut honey (the rarest) from Epirus, possessed of a faint, pleasant bitterness; Pine honey, high in antioxidants and minerals, accounts for 65% of all Greece produces; Heather honey, produced in early autumn when the heather blossom, is dark, thick and crystalline; Fir honey, from Vytina in the Peloponnese, is the only certified PDO honey.

Because it was Greek week at Lidl supermarket last week, I have been enjoying authentic Greek yoghurt with dried figs and Halkidiki honey for breakfast recently.

My favourite, though, is the thyme honey from dusty Crete, which I discovered when visiting the island nearly half a century ago. They do say that first impressions are lasting ones. It is very possible that Minoan Crete, nearly 4,000 years in the past, was the birthplace of apiculture, of bee worship (referenced above) and of the high regard for honey as a valuable and health-giving commodity. The beautiful  Malia pendant, discovered at Malia in Crete in 1930, is graphic testament to this regard. It dates from approximately 1800 BC, is worked in gold and shows two symmetrical bees. It's the most stunning piece of Minoan jewellery and if you ever get the chance to to go Heraklion Archaeological Museum, do seek it out.

famous bee pendant
Today's poem is partly in memory of that first visit to Crete in 1974. We pitched tent and stayed for a few days on Amnissos beach to the east of Heraklion. It was deserted. This was pre-hotels, villas, tourist package holidays, more the tail-end of the hippy trail. The area was unspoiled, unbuilt-up, probably looking much like it had for the last several hundred years. It was also the summer of the Cyprus war (the last major military engagement between Greeks and Turks), so many had been deterred from visiting the region. 

It was quite symbolic to me, having read Homer, to know that we were camping in a place where Odysseus had made landfall: "He had been driven to Crete by a gale which had blown him off his course at Cape Malea when bound for Troy. He put in at Amnissos, where the cave of Eileithyie is - a difficult harbour to make - only just escaping from the storm." (The Odyssey, XIX, lines 186 following.) Amnissos was the harbour for the bronze-age Minoan palace-town of Knossos circa 1380 BC. The sea-level is 3 metres higher now than it was in the bronze age, but the walls of submerged houses are still visible from the current shore. It was also here during excavations in 1932 that fragmented clay tablets were uncovered bearing a script that came to be known as Linear B.

Linear B clay tabled reconstructed
For a long time, archaeologists and classicists argued about the nature and origins of the script, many suggesting it was more akin to Babylonian or Egyptian hieroglyphs than anything else and that the artefacts had probably been brought to Crete (and mainland Greece) by traders. The truth, when the code was finally cracked by Michael Ventris in the 1950s, was that Linear B is actually a written form of early Greek, though obviously the symbols differ from the script that became dominant in the Aegean with the rise to prominence of the Mycenaeans. It is now known that writing in Linear B on clay tablets was a common practice in Minoan times to record inventories, trading transactions, treaties and official documents - but it is in the nature of clay to soften and crumble, so that 99.99% of these artefacts had only a limited life and were often broken down into soft clay to be reused. The 0.001% that we have today only survived because they were accidentally (and providentially) baked to hardness and thus durability in the fires that burned the great Minoan palaces to the ground in an act of war.

Here then (finally, you say), flowing from the Hellenic chamber of the Imaginarium, my latest...

Amnissos 1974
Broken Knossos somewhere to our backs,
here on wide Amnissos beach whose sand

still radiates as twilight steals  the day, we
sit and conjure visions of longships hulled

along its shore, tents pitched just like ours 
and fires roasting fish and flesh. Phantoms

roar in war formation, shattering the mood,
an age-old enmity renewed in Eastern skies

with Cyprus the prize; once quiet descends
again we contemplate past times and place,

a gentle murmur of lapis waves contrasting
with such echoing ire as torched a Minoan 

palace, the trick of destruction which saved
in perpetuity clay tablets bearing baked-in

witness shaped in ancient script to ordinary 
lives. Those testimonies, rendered shards in

further acts of desecration, lay buried in the
Cretan sand we sit on as history ran full tilt

down three millennia until, disinterred and
deciphered in our very lifetime, they spoke

through strife and smoke against all odds -
my favourite: "one jar of honey to the Gods".


Thanks for reading. Keep eating honey, S ;-)

119 comments:

Anne Ward said...

They say bees shouldn't be able to fly but the bee doesn't know that. I say it's the Buzz that keeps them flying.

Bickerstaffe said...

The above comment certainly applies to Bumblebees. I don't know about the rest of them. More great blogging Steve, and I love the poem.

Nigella D said...

You're a hive of knowledge ;) This was fascinating and beautifully written. I love the poem.

Lois Hayburn said...

Bravo. An excellent bee blog and poem. It sounds like a special place. 💙

Anonymous said...

Instructive blog and interesting poem. Well done Mr R.

Jen McDonagh said...

Yes, love the title and all the information about Greek bees and honey. I'll have to go and google Linear B as well now for the full story. Beautiful poetry as ever. Thank you.

Hikka Kinnunen said...

🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝

Dani Merakli said...

Top bee blogging Steve. Will you get to Greece again this year?

Miriam Fife said...

Your blogs never fail to fascinate and instruct. I loved this and the poem. Well done.

Rochelle said...

Great linear bee blog Steve and that pendant looks fabulous. BTW, when is your collection coming out???

Lois Marinoglou said...

Thank you Steve for your lovely post. Greek honey is wonderful of sun and flowers. 💙

Caroline Asher said...

A pleasure to read, as ever. 🐝 That pendant is beautiful, ditto the poem.

Malcolm Drysdale said...

One only owns the hives, I suppose, never really the bees. I've never been to Crete but your excellent poem took me there.

Lisa Topalidou said...

Loved this blog and what a beautiful poem! 🌿 🐝

Ross Madden said...

Great blog Steve. Your love of Greece (and honey) shines through. I really like the poem. 👏

Rod Downey said...

Great blog Steve. I remember you telling me about that holiday - first impressions are powerful ones for sure. It's a fine poem too.

Anonymous said...

Ah memories. I remember that “ gentle murmur of lapis waves” from late summer 1966. BEAUT poem, Steve.

Jazmeen said...

Top blogging Steve. So many types of honey. Yum! And I love the poem, just fab!

Laxmiben Hirani said...

I loved the poem. Bees are vital for humankind without them we would have nothing and that is why I would encourage everyone to have flowers, fruits and vegetables in the garden, does not matter what you grow flowers are part of them and seeds which bees pollinate. I could visualise myself with friends at the beach with a fire, singing, telling stories and chatting and just letting my hair down and watching the sun set and rise with the blue clear skies and the sun beating down upon me.

You surely know how to take anyone to another place Steve!! Historical Crete, all part of Greece is full of history and if we think about it, it is right there in the sands we walk in, touch, feel, see, smell of the traditions they have, as they say old is gold and this is so true, as the old that is gold does come into use when we are stuck even in this century.

Charlotte Mullins said...

Beautifully written Steve, and such a fascinating read. Thanks for sharing.

Sahra Carezel said...

The blog is wonderful. I loved the illustrations. Most of all, I enjoyed your latest poem. It is so beautifully written with lines to treasure. Well done. 💙 🐝

Deke Hughes said...

Fascinating summoning up of the past into the present (well, 1974 at least) in the most evocative way, and I love that line "they spoke/ through strife and smoke against all odds". Clever and beautiful poetry.

Bridget Durkin said...

I like the idea of bees being messengers from the gods. This was a lovely blog Steve.

Nick Ball said...

What a great read. I always enjoy your blogs, including the sign-offs. Keep eating honey is a sound entreaty:)

CI66Y said...

Another beautifully written piece Steve. Your abiding love of Greece shines through. Fingers crossed you can get back there later this year. I thought the poem was brilliantly done.

Gareth Boyd Haskins said...

Loving your linear bee blog. 👏

Robert Harries said...

Some of those honeys sound lovely (fir and chestnut - wow!). I don't have a Lidl near me, so the best I can manage is Greek yogurt and generic honey. I'm sure there's a great story behind the discovery and deciphering of Linear B. I'll head off to Wikiworld shortly. Your poem is beautifully worked. It took me a while to figure out the Phantoms must have been actual warplanes. Very well done with all of it.

Debbie Laing said...

An absolute treat to read. I learn so much from your blogs apart from the stream of great poetry. Thanks for sharing.

Jack Telfer said...

I heard a rumour you used to be a teacher. Why doesn't that surprise me? This is a great post and I really like what you've achieved in your poem. 👍

Saskia Parker said...

Thanks for a fascinating blog. It's amazing to think that it was only by chance those clay tablets got fired for posterity. Your poem is beautifully evocative. I love it. And that jewellery :)

Mel Goldsmith said...

I'm named for a priestess of the bee goddess? I never knew that. I loved the bee blog. 🐝👏🐝👏🐝

Heidi Williams said...

That's a fascinating read, really well put together. The poem is ace. 👍

Grant Trescothick said...

Honey as a source of wisdom and poetry. QED, I should say. Great blog Steve ;)

Frida Mancour said...

Wonderful, Steve.

Lizzie Fentiman said...

Lovely bee blogging, and as others have noted, the poem's a beaut. Well done.

Brett Cooper said...

Now that is seriously good, my friend. Great blogging and one fine poem. I was there!

Νίκος said...

φανταστικός - ευχαριστώ πολύ 🌿

Beth Randle said...

Wow Steve, that's such an interesting and well-written blog. Is there an account (documentary maybe) about how Linear B was deciphered? I don't have a Lidl near me but Sainsbury's stocks a rather fine pine and fir tree honey (from Odysea). I thought your Amnissos poem was brilliant. Well done.

Emily Blythe said...

What a lovely blog. I always save them for a Sunday morning and this was a delight to read, so informative, so well written and illustrated, and your latest poem is beautifully expressed. Thank you for sharing.

Tony Sedgwick said...

Bravo for a brilliant linear bee blog and poem. 'Amnissos 1974' is sure to get your poetry collection off to a flying start. 😃

Nicci Haralambous said...

I loved the blog and your poem took my breath away. Wonderful! 💙

K. Worth said...

All your blogs are great to read and it's a while since I commented, but this struck me as one of the best; fascinating bee and honey facts and a lovely poem. 👍

Ben Templeton said...

Linear bee is a nice play on beeline, and what a fascinating and instructive post. The illustrations are great and as for your Amnissos poem, so beautifully worked. Excellent blogging Steve.

Mark II Ford said...

Fabulous blog! So well written I read it through twice. I love that poem. 👏

Jools said...

I'd be a Greek bee too (gentle and warmth-loving) making honey for the gods. This is such a great post, a fascinating read, and your poem is fab Steve.

Natalija Drozdova said...

Beautiful post and poetry, written with so much affection and skill. Your love for your subject shines through and your poem is stunning! ❤️

Amber Molloy said...

I love bees and reading this made me very happy. It's beautifully written. 🐝

Hannah Wrigley said...

All those beautiful hives :) I'm told that in Ancient Greece they used to keep their bees in wicker or straw hives known as skeps (great word). Thanks so much for this, I really enjoyed it.

Steve Rowland said...

Thanks everyone for the generous feedback. Beth R: I have a book by John Chadwick titled The Decipherment Of Linear B (published 1959) but I have no idea if it is still in print. There was a BBC documentary Michael Ventris - a very English Genius about 20 years ago...might be on YouTube. All: As for the collection, Amnissos 1974 will definitely be the opening poem and I hope it will be available this summer, now going to be called From the Imaginarium.

Dan Francisco said...

Incredible to think that it was only a chance act of destruction that preserved those Minoan tablets for posterity. It makes you wonder about all that has been lost. Still, you've created a beautiful poem out of the whole thing.

Francesca Marrone said...

Lovely. I must find chestnut honey! 🐝 🐝 🐝

Kim Clark said...

That's such a great blog Steve, beautifully written as ever and with a hauntingly lovely poem. I really got the feel for a special place. 👏

Myra DeJonge said...

Really enjoyable that. We've been to Crete a few times, visited Heraklion and Knossos but never discovered Amnissos. What have me missed? Your poem is mighty fine. Well done.

Dan Ewers said...

Splendid bee and honey blogging Steve. My local Lidl yielded up pine honey from Euboea. I think you said that was the most common type. It's lovely, quite crystalline but delicious at a spoon a day for medicinal purposes :)

Anonymous said...

θαυμάσια γραφή!💙

Max Page said...

What a fascinating account, both of bee-keeping and how history came to be preserved. You've captured a special sense of it in your Amnissos poem, Steve. Well played.

Anonymous said...

Very nicely written blog and lovely poem. 👍

Anonymous said...

Amazing. Loved reading your blog - got you bookmarked.

Kevin Sterling said...

I thought that was really very good indeed, Steve, excellent blogging and a fine poem. 👏

Cerys Jones said...

Terrific post and poetry. I love it!

Gerry McGee said...

Great read, so much fascinating information about honey and history. I love the way you've woven it all into your poetry.

Jerry Miller said...

That's a great post. Crete is a place I've never been so it's now on the list! Great timeless pic of colored hives. Love that poem too.

Lynne Carter said...

I enjoyed that, Steve. Thanks for sharing. Your blogs are such an education! Lovely poem too. 💙

Jambo said...

Top wordsmithery. That's so cool, got me buzzin'. 🐝

Martina Connors said...

All so beautifully written and illustrated, a treat to read. Thanks :)

Bill Dexter said...

On Amnissos sands you can connect everything Steve. Very nicely done.

Debs Kavanagh said...

You have to love bees. And Greece. What a great blog.

Mary Jane Evans said...

Loved this Steve. You write so beautifully. When is the book coming out?

Howie Schroeder said...

Your whole blog raised a smile. What a joy to read. The info about bees in antiquity was fascinating as was the lowdown on types of Greek honey. The stuff about linear b is intriguing (and I'll follow up online in greater depth). Your poem was a bonus - wonderfully realised. 👏👏👏

Steve Fallows said...

Very good. 👍

Penny Lockhart said...

Thanks Steve. I enjoyed this post, most interesting - and a lovely poem. I really must read the Odyssey one day!

Anonymous said...

Exquisite blogging. Loved that poem.

Ivy Harrington said...

This is up there with the most enjoyable of your blogs. Great writing, great knowledge, wonderful poetry. I love it, thanks for sharing.

Przem Mazurkiewicz said...

Wonderful blog and poem. Thank you for the link.

Bruce Paley said...

Excellent stuff Steve (your blog and honey). The poem took me there. 👏

Nick Pareze said...

Great blog, great poem. Top class man!

Elli Vokali said...

Yes, liked the clever title, really enjoyed the blog (it's beautifully expressed and illustrated) and your love of Greece shines through. That poem ties it all up. Fab post.💙

Karola Emmanuel said...

Both lovely and fascinating to read. So well done.

David Spencer said...

Very good Steve. Another fabulous blog and poem.

Anonymous said...

Brilliant. 🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝

Becca Riley said...

Such a great read, so informative. Love the poem too.

Yianni Aspradakis said...

Our connection to the past is very important for us and I love that you care about the connection.

Anonymous said...

Loved this Steve.

Vanilla said...

Fabulous!

Mark Hurley said...

An excellent post! Really well developed and I loved the poem. 👏

Anonymous said...

What a beautiful bee blog and poem.

Des Thewlis said...

You've tempted me to go shopping for honey for the first time in years. A spoonful a day in a dish of yogurt sounds like a great idea. I thoroughly enjoyed your blog and poem. Thanks for sharing Steve.

Richard Houghton said...

Well this was fascinating. We've been to Heraklion and Knossos and I didn't know until reading your blog that Amnissos ever existed. If we ever go back... Fabulous poetry, too. 👏👏👏

Anonymous said...

Buzzing after that :) 🐝

Nik Stengelis said...

Really enjoyed that, so well written and a lovely poem.

Fensman said...

Bee populations are in decline so anything that can be done to promote appreciation of their importance and to help them thrive gets a thumbs up from me. 👍

Howie Schroeder said...

That's brilliant! 👏

Brizette Lempro said...

I love it! 💛

Anonymous said...

Fabulous blog, great bee info and a lovely, evocative poem. Bravo.

Tanya Green said...

So good! Well done. 👏

Ruth Maxwell said...

You write honeyed words. I loved the blog and poem too. 🐝🐝

Lina Gulhane said...

Yes! I went to Lidl and found not only Thyme Honey from the Aegean Islands but also Cretan Blossom Honey. God bless the busy Greek bees - and you, for your wonderful blog. It's a treasure.

Anonymous said...

Honey is a miracle substance. I loved your bee blog.

Δήμητρα Καραγεώργου said...

Αυτό είναι ένα μεγάλο blog. Ευχαριστώ. 👍

Helly Warhurst said...

Beautifully written and fascinating to read. I love your bee blog and the poem.

Nikos Halikias said...

Thank you.

Jacq Slater said...

I fear for the bees with all these forest fires in Greece but what a great blog and terrific poem. 👏

Elena Politakis said...

Beautiful blog, love your poetry.

Rachel Harrington said...

Fabulous blogging, and some interesting comments as well. I love the poem and fear for the bees with the recent forest fires in Greece.

Bella Jane Barclay said...

Such a lovely blog and poem. 💚

Anonymous said...

Fabulous post, so informed and readable. I liked the Odyssey reference in the blog and the beautifully constructed poem. Your love of your subject shines through.

Sophia Mapano said...

Fascinating blog. All those wonderful coloured beehives, such a joy to see. I loved the poem which wove so many elements together -really beautiful.

Martin Brewster said...

What a fascinating read, so much to digest. It's beautifully written and illustrated and the poem took me there. Well done and thank you.

Kat(rina) Ellison said...

Great blog. I loved the poem.

Yvonne Russell said...

What a wonderful and wise blog, what a lovely poem, what beautiful jewellery.

Anita Fairfax said...

Linear Bees...down three millennia. Brilliant blogging and poetry. 🐝🐝🐝

Χλόη said...

💙🐝👍

Jeff Hollingsworth said...

Such an interesting and instructive read.👏

Dev Shastri said...

Excellent post, so informative. Great poetry too.

Anonymous said...

in the best thyme honeyed tradition ;) 🐝

Henry Flowers said...

Just a brilliant read! I love the knowledge.

Suzanne Edwards said...

I'm buzzing after reading this beautifully written, illustrated and informative blog. The jewellery is stunning and your poem equally so.

Janny Kleemens said...

What a very fine post. An absorbing read and a clever poem.

Don Packman said...

Wow. The sense you had of that historical connection comes across strongly in your Amnissos poem. It must have been awesome.