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'''Honey''' is a sweet a substance produced by bees and other similar insects.
'''Honey''' is a sweet a substance produced by bees and other similar insects.


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Due to the nymph, priestesses of mystery cults in the Greek world were often called ''Melissai'', and honey was a valued offering to make to the gods.<ref name="Mythological Significance" />
Due to the nymph, priestesses of mystery cults in the Greek world were often called ''Melissai'', and honey was a valued offering to make to the gods.<ref name="Mythological Significance" />
==Trivia==
*[https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/μέλισσα Μέλισσᾰ] (''mélissa'') is Greek for '(honey) bee', and poetically used of honey itself, derived from the Greek word [https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/μέλῐ] (''méli''), meaning 'honey, sweet'.
*[[Periander]], the tyrant of [[Korinth]], called his wife Lyside 'Melissa'. In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]'' this is acknowledged via a [[Monument of Melissa|monument]] for her located in [[Hera's Watch]] in [[Argolis]], [[Greece]].


==Appearances==
==Appearances==

Revision as of 11:55, 18 September 2019


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Honey is a sweet a substance produced by bees and other similar insects.

Significance

In ancient Greece, honey was considered a 'gift from gods', as its origins were not fully understood, despite beekeeping being a part of the daily life of Greeks ever since the Minoan times.[1] Due to its mystery, honey was considered a kind of a panacea, and was widely used as medicine.[1]

Numerous poets, including Hesiod, Homer, and Virgil mention honey and bees, beehives in their works, with Virgil even going as far as dedicating an ode to beekeeping in his Georgics.[1]

Honey was also valued, and could be used as currency while trading, or when paying tributes, like Korsika did to Etruscans.[1]

Mythology

Due to the observed 'supernatural' nature of honey, it left its mark in the mythology of Greece as well. A nymph named Melissa was said to have been the very first to discover and harvest honey. When the Titan Rhea hid her son Zeus from his father Kronos on Mount Ida in Messara, Krete, Melissa took care of the infant together with her sister Adrasteia. Melissa was also connected with the goddess Demeter, into whose mysteries she was inducted.[2]

Due to the nymph, priestesses of mystery cults in the Greek world were often called Melissai, and honey was a valued offering to make to the gods.[2]

Trivia

Appearances

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Assassin's Creed: OdysseyDiscovery Tour / Discovery Sites: Honey
  2. 2.0 2.1 Assassin's Creed: Odyssey – Discovery Tour / Discovery Sites: The Mythological Significance of Honey