
History Of Olive Trees
Olive trees, ‘Olea europaea,’ are the oldest fruit
trees and certainly are one of the most important fruit trees in
history. Olive tree culture has been closely connected to the rise
and fall of Mediterranean empires and other advanced civilizations
throughout the ages. Because olive trees offered wealth and future
food supplies to established civilizations, the agricultural nations
became stable societies, resulting from a secure expectation from
past experience of an uninterrupted food and olive oil supply.
This factor was a necessary requirement for population growth and
increase. Dependable fruit production and olive oil production
means that olive trees must exist in a stable society and a peaceful
environment. That stability must extend for many years, since most
ancient seedling olive trees required eight or more years before
ever producing the first crop of fruit. Productive orchards of
olive trees meant that a foundation of the great empires of Greece
and Rome had arisen and developed into complex economic and political
forces. It is interesting to note that the historical decline of
these empires corresponded to the destruction of their olive tree
orchards that reduced the available supplies of olives, olive oil,
olive wood, and olive soap. In connection with the destruction
of olive orchards, it is interesting to note that in the Israeli
wars with Palestine, 50,000 olive trees were destroyed by Israeli
bulldozers. That act of agricultural destruction resulted in considerable
anger and unrest along the Gaza strip and the West Bank, because
the economic livelihood of many Palestinian farmers depended on
their products from the uprooted olive trees. Additionally, the
olive tree was historically a ‘peace and goodwill’ symbol,
and when the olive trees were leveled near the city of Bethlehem,
the birthplace of Jesus and the “Cradle of Biblical History,” that
elimination of olive trees seemed like a deliberate provocation
to end the ‘peace’ with the Palestinian settlers and
farmers.
Medical properties of olive oil were reported by many ancient
Greek writers and philosophers, their importance in creating nutritional
benefits and wealth for Greek citizens continues abundantly today--some
Greek olive tree orchards containing a million or more trees. Aristotle
wrote extensively about the accepted methods of successfully growing
olive trees.
Greek mythology records that Athena, the Goddess of wisdom and
peace, struck her magic spear into the Earth, and it turned into
an olive tree, thus, the location where the olive tree appeared
and grew was named Athens, Greece, in honor of the Goddess, Athena.
Local legend tells us that the original olive tree still stands
growing after many centuries at the ancient sacred site. Citizens
still claim that all Greek olive trees originated from rooted cuttings
that were grown from that original olive tree. Homer claimed in
his writings that the ancient olive tree growing in Athens was
already 10,000 years old. Homer stated
that Greek courts sentenced people to death if they destroyed an
olive tree. In 775 BC Olympia, Greece, at the site of the ancient
Olympic stadium, athletes competed and trained, and winners were
triumphantly acclaimed and crowned with a wreath made of olive
twigs. Ancient gold coins that were minted in Athens depicted the
face of the Goddess, Athena, wearing an olive leaf wreath on her
helmet holding a clay vessel of olive oil. The Greeks began olive
cultivation in 700 BC. The sacred lamp that was used in ancient
Greek culture for lighting dark rooms at night was fueled by olive
oil. Aged olive oil was also used in sacred anointing rituals of
the church at weddings and at baptisms. Herodotus wrote in 500
BC, that the growing and exporting of olives and olive oil were
so sacred that only virgins and eunuchs were allowed to cultivate
orchards of olive trees. The first documented plantings of olive
trees may have occurred during the Minoan civilization on the island
of Crete and are believed to have been growing around 3500 BC.
That civilization predates the discovered Mycenae olive fossils
from 1600 BC and later in the Greek empire. Sturt Manning, an archeologist
from Cornell University, reported in Live Science Magazine (Apr
28, 2005) that the most devastating volcano in 10,000 years occurred
on the Greek Island of Thera, after which the city of Akrotiri
was totally buried by the falling ash. The finding of olive wood
and olive seed fossils buried near the site has shown through carbon
dating that the volcanic eruption occurred between 1660 and 1600
BC and may have contributed to the total destruction of the advanced
Minoan civilization (Atlantis) on the isle of Crete and may have
led to the formation of the Sahara desert in North Africa after
vaporizing the native forests there.
The fragrant flowers of olive trees are small and creamy white,
hidden within the thick leaves. Some cultivars will self pollinate,
but others will not. The blossoms usually begin appearing in April
and can continue for many months. A wild, seedling olive tree normally
begins to flower and produce fruit at the age of 8 years. The fruit
of the olive tree is a purplish-black when completely ripe, but
a few cultivars are green when ripe and some olives turn a color
of copper-brown. The size of the olive fruit is variable, even
on the same tree, and the shape ranges from round to oval with
pointed ends. Some olives can be eaten fresh after sun-drying and
the taste is sweet, but most olive cultivars are bitter and must
be treated by various chemical solutions before developing into
edible olives. If the olives are thinned on the limbs of the trees
to 2 or 3 per twig, the ultimate size of the olives will be much
larger. The fruit is gathered in mid October and should be processed
as soon as possible to prevent fermentation and a decline in quality.
The leaves of olive trees are gray-green and are replaced at 2-3
year intervals during the spring after new growth appears. Pruning
yearly and severely is very important to insure continued production.
The trees have the unproductive limbs removed, “so that it
will be more fruitful” John 15:2. An olive tree can grow
to 50 feet with a limb spread of 30 feet, but most growers will
keep the tree pruned to 20 feet to assure maximum production. New
sprouts and trees will emerge from the olive tree stump roots,
even if the trees are cut down. Some olive trees are believed to
be over a thousand years old, and most will live to the ripe old
age of 500 years.
Olives generally are beaten off trees with poles, harvested mechanically
or by shaking the fruit from the trees onto canvas. Most ripening
olives are removed from the trees after the majority of the fruit
begins to change in color. It is important to squeeze out the olive
oil within a day after harvesting or else fermentation or decline
in flavor and quality will occur. The olive oil can be consumed
or used in cooking immediately after its collection from the press.
Olive oils are unique and distinct, each brand of olive oil having
its own character, as determined by many factors, like those unique
flavor differences found in fine wines. Prepared commercial olive
oils can vary greatly in aroma, fruit flavor; whether the taste
is, flowery, nutty, delicate, or mild, and the coloring of olive
oil is quite variable.
Olive oil produces many health benefits when used in cooking or
when poured over salads. The use of olive oil can improve digestion
and can benefit heart metabolism through its low content of cholesterol.
Experts claim that olive oil consumption will cause a person to
grow shiny hair, prevent dandruff, prevent wrinkles, prevent dry
skin and acne, strengthen nails, stop muscle aching, lower blood
pressure and cancel out the effects of alcohol.
Olive trees can survive droughts and strong winds, and they grow
well on well drained soils up to a pH of 8.5 and the trees can
tolerate salt water conditions. In Europe, olive trees are normally
fertilized every other year with an organic fertilizer. Alternate
bearing can be avoided by heavy pruning and generally the trees
respond to this very quickly and favorably.
Olive trees should be purchased that have been vegetatively propagated
or grafted, because the seed grown trees will revert to a wild
type that yields small olives with an insipid taste. Olive trees
are more resistant to diseases and insects than any other fruit
tree and, therefore, are sprayed less than any other crop.
Even though commercial production of olives in the United States
is only 2% of the world market, great interest in growing olives
throughout the South has been stimulated by the recent introduction
of promising cold hardy olive trees from European hybridizers.
Many European immigrants to the United States grow their own olive
trees in large pots, that can be moved in and out of the house
during seasonal changes.
About the Author
Learn more about various trees by visiting the author’s website: http://www.tytyga.com
Article Source: Patrick
Malcolm at JPServicez-SearchArticles.com
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