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The Olive was a native to Asia Minor and spread
from Iran, Syria, Jordan and Palestine to the rest of the
Mediterranean basin 6,000 years ago. It is among the oldest
known cultivated trees in the world - being grown before the
written language was invented. It was being grown on Crete by
3,000 BC and may have been the source of the wealth of the
Minoan kingdom. The Phoenicians spread the olive to the
Mediterranean shores of Africa and Southern Europe. Olives have
been found in Egyptian tombs from 2000 years BC. The olive
culture was spread to the early Greeks then Romans. As the
Romans extended their domain they brought the olive with them.
1400 years ago the Prophet of Islam, Muhammad
peace may be upon him, advised his followers to apply olive oil
to their bodies, and himself used oil on his head. The use of
oil is found in many religions and cultures. It has been used
during special ceremonies and also as a general health measure.
During baptism in the Christian church, holy oil, which is often
olive oil, may be used for anointment. At the Chrism mass olive
oil blessed by the bishop, "chrism", is used in the ceremony.
Like the grape, the Christian missionaries brought the olive
tree with them to California for food but also for ceremonial
use. Olive oil was used to anoint the early kings of the Greeks
and Jews. The Greeks anointed winning athletes. Olive oil has
also been used to anoint the dead in many cultures.
The olive trees on the Mount of Olives in
Jerusalem are reputed to be over 2000 years old, still relative
newcomers considering the long domestication of the olive. We
don't know the exact variety of the trees on the Mount. The
olive tree has been manipulated by man for so many thousands of
years that it is unclear which varieties came from which other
varieties. Varieties in one country have been found to be
identical to differently named varieties in another. Some
research is now being done using gene mapping techniques to
figure out the olive family tree. Shrub-like "feral" olives
still exist in the middle East which represent the original
stock from which all other olives are descended.
In the past several hundred years the olive has
spread to North and South America, Japan, New Zealand and
Australia.
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