News (Ancient) Citrus Fruits Were Symbols of High Social Status in Ancient Rome

 

Bestiola

Nequissima

  • Civis Illustris

  • Sacerdos Isidis

Citrus fruits such as citrons and lemons were clear status symbols for the ancient Roman ruling elite, according to new research from Tel Aviv University.

“Today, citrus orchards are a major component of the Mediterranean landscape and one of the most important cultivated fruits in the region. But citrus is not native to the Mediterranean Basin and originated in Southeast Asia,” said Dr. Dafna Langgut, an archaeobotanist at Tel Aviv University and the author of a paper published in the journal HortScience.
“My findings show that citrons and lemons were the first citrus fruits to arrive in the Mediterranean and were status symbols for the elite. All other citrus fruits most probably spread more than a millennium later for economic reasons.”

“Citron, also known as etrogim, was the first citrus to spread west, apparently through Persia and the Southern Levant (citron botanical remains were found in a Persian royal garden near Jerusalem dated to the 5th and 4th centuries BC) and then to the western Mediterranean (early Roman period, third and second centuries BC),” the researcher said.

“It appears that the citron was considered a valuable commodity due to its healing qualities, symbolic use, pleasant odor and rarity. Only the rich could have afforded it. Its spread therefore was helped more by its high social status, its significance in religion and its unique features, rather than its culinary qualities.”

“The earliest lemon botanical remains, found in the Forum Romanum (Rome), date to right around the time of Jesus Christ, the end of the first century BC and early first century CE,” she added.
“It seems, therefore, that lemon was the second citrus species introduced to the Mediterranean.”
“The contexts of the botanical remains, in relation to elite gardens, show that in antiquity, both citrus and lemon were products representing high social status.”

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http://www.sci-news.com/archaeology/citrus-fruits-ancient-rome-05144.html
 

scrabulista

Consul

  • Consul

Location:
Tennessee
Here we go a-wassailing....
 

Iohannes Aurum

Technicus Auxiliarius

  • Technicus Auxiliarius

Location:
Torontum, Ontario, Canada
The "Golden Apples" in mythology could refer to oranges.
 
E

Etaoin Shrdlu

Guest

“It appears that the citron was considered a valuable commodity due to its healing qualities, symbolic use, pleasant odor and rarity. Only the rich could have afforded it. Its spread therefore was helped more by its high social status, its significance in religion and its unique features, rather than its culinary qualities.”
I'm sure snobbery would been a factor in possessing anything expensive and difficult to obtain, but where's the evidence for assuming that this was the main reason for its spread? Did people hang them from strings and mutely adore them?
 
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