Wednesday, August 7, 2002 (AP)
(08-07) 22:37 PDT (AP)
By JASON KEYSER Associated Press Writer
JERUSALEM (AP) -- A thriving Bronze Age drug trade
supplied narcotics to ancient cultures throughout the
eastern Mediterranean as balm for the pain of childbirth and
disease, proving a sophisticated knowledge of medicines
dating back thousands of years, researchers say.
Ancient ceramic pots, most of them nearly identical in
shape and about five inches long, have been found in tombs
and settlements throughout the Middle East, dating as far
back as 1,400 B.C., said Joe Zias, an anthropologist at
Jerusalem's Hebrew University.
The drugs were probably used as medicine and the finds
are helping researchers better understand how ancient people
treated illness and disease.
"It's a window to the past that many people are unaware
of," Zias told a recent conference in Israel on DNA and
archaeology. "Here's something used in prehistoric times and
it's used until today."
When turned upside down, the thin-necked vessels with
round bases resemble opium poppies pods. If there was any
doubt about what was inside, the round bases have white
markings, designs that symbolized knife cuts made on poppies
bulbs so the white opium base can ooze and be harvested,
Zias said.
The Mycenaean ceramics were analyzed with a procedure
called gas chromatography that turned up traces of opium.
Hundreds of the pots have been found and they commonly
show up in the hands of antiquities dealers in places like
Jerusalem's Old City. "Give me an hour there and I could
find you 10 of them," Zias said.
Based on ancient Egyptian medical writings from the 3rd
millennium B.C., researchers believe opium and hashish -- a
smokable drug that comes from the concentrated resin from
the flowers of hemp plants -- were used during surgery and
to treat aches and pains and other ailments. Hashish was
also used to ease menstrual cramps and was even offered to
women during childbirth.
Based on Egyptian writings, archaeologists believe the
opium was eaten rather than smoked.
The drugs are part of a medical record that shows the
ancients were far more advanced than most people realize,
Zias said, noting evidence that European people did cranial
surgery as long as 10,000 years ago, while the Romans left
records of 120 surgical procedures.
Mark Spigelman, a Zias colleague at Hebrew University,
found one of the poppy-shaped ceramic pots from the middle
Bronze Age in Siqqura, a Giza cemetery near the pyramids
outside of Cairo during a dig four years ago.
The pot, found in an 18th Egyptian Dynasty grave, was
identical to other pots found throughout ancient Israel and
the Middle East.
"These guys were selling opium all over the Middle East,"
Spigelman said. "This is the original Medellin cartel, 3,500
years ago," he said in a joking reference to the violent
Colombian cocaine cartel.
It seems more likely, however, that the ancient trade was
run by respected healers rather than violent drug lords.
"We know for sure these things were used for medical
purposes," Zias said.
"The question is whether they were used for recreational
purposes."
In an archaeologically rich area of central Israel, Zias
found another clue. While excavating a tomb from the late
Roman period in the town of Beit Shemesh 10 years ago, he
found the skeleton of a 14-year-old girl who died in
childbirth around 390 A.D. On her stomach was a fleck of a
burnt brownish, black substance.
"I thought it was incense," Zias said. But when he had it
analyzed by police and chemists at Hebrew University, it
turned out to be a seven gram mixture of hashish, dried
seeds, fruit and common reeds.
Seven glass vessels containing traces of the drug were
found near the skeleton. She probably used them to inhale
the smoky cocktail to aid her delivery. Medical researchers
have found that other than relaxing the user, hashish
increases the force and frequency of contractions in women
giving birth; and it was used in deliveries until the 19th
century, after which new drugs were developed.
But it didn't help this girl, who was only 4 feet 6
inches tall. She bled to death.
The drug was an extremely rare find. Organic compounds
quickly decay, but because this one had been burned it was
carbonized and preserved.
"It's the first time it's ever been found in terms of
direct evidence in an archaeological dig," Zias said. "You
rarely find direct evidence of drugs in antiquity."
Copyright 2002 AP