Israeli scientists dig up cannabis traces in ancient temple
By Ilan Ben Zion
Associated Press
June 1, 2020
JERUSALEM -- Israeli archaeologists say they’ve found cannabis residue on artifacts
from an ancient temple in southern Israel — providing the first evidence
of the use of hallucinogenics in the ancient Jewish religion.
In
a research paper, the authors say the discovery from an 8th-century
B.C. shrine at Tel Arad offers the first proof for “the use of
mind-altering substances as part of cultic rituals in Judah,” including
the first Jewish Temple that stood in Jerusalem at the same time.
Archaeological
excavations at Tel Arad, located around 35 miles (60 kilometers) south
of Jerusalem, in the 1960s discovered a stronghold belonging to the
ancient kingdom of Judah, and at its core a small shrine bearing
striking similarities to the biblical Temple in Jerusalem.
But for decades,
attempts to determine the composition of black deposits found on two
limestone altars from the shrine’s inner sanctum — now located at the
Israel Museum in Jerusalem — were inconclusive.
Chemical
analysis of the samples conducted at Israel’s Hebrew University and
Technion Institute found that one altar contained the psychoactive
compounds found in marijuana, and the other had traces of frankincense —
one of the ingredients mentioned in the Bible for the incense sacrifice
in the ancient Jewish Temples, the authors wrote.
The
researchers published their findings Friday in the academic journal,
“Tel Aviv: Journal of the Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv
University.”
Eran
Arie, curator of Iron Age archaeology at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem
and lead author of the study, said the discovery was “revolutionary,”
as it was the earliest evidence of cannabis use in the ancient Near East
and the “first time we see psychoactive substances in Judahite
religion.”
The
absence of cannabis pollen or seeds from the ancient Near East indicates
the cannabis was likely imported over long distance trade routes,
possibly in the form of resin, known colloquially as hashish. The
chemical analysis from the Tel Arad altar showed it was burned atop
dried animal dung.
“Here,
the official state religion of the kingdom of Judah was using this
substance,” Arie said. Because of the site’s clear connection to the
monarchy, he suggests it could point to how worship was conducted in the
biblical Temple in Jerusalem.
Yossi
Garfinkel, an archaeology professor from Hebrew University who was not
involved in the study, said that the ritual use of wine in Judaism, and
some indications of opium use elsewhere in the region, suggests that for
the ancient Israelites, it was “a desirable thing to get into ecstasy
and connect with God.”
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