The Ancient Greek Economy. Markets, Households and City-States

(Rick Simeone) #1

A GENERAL MODEL Of LONG-DISTANCE TRADE 307


the exclusion of the newly available substances from some established cults.^54


Already for Xenophanes, their use was an integral part of a symposion (fr. 21


B 1.7 D-K), while Pythagoreans as near-vegetarians evidently embraced their


use as an alternative to animal sacrifice with enthusiasm.^55 If Empedocles II of


Acragas linked them with Aphrodite in his vision of the Golden Age (fr. 31 B


128.4-7 D-K), his homonymous grandfather as victor at Olympia in 496 had


‘made an ox out of myrrh, frankincense and the most expensive spices and


divided it up among the people attending the festival’.^56 The anecdote is not


just piquant, for it shows that as in cult, so also in social use, already by the


early fifth century effective demand had generated a traffic that was substan-


tial enough for suppliers to be able to cater for such extravagances at minimal


notice. Not that the act of Empedocles I was unique, either, for six years later


at another sanctuary, in a comparable act of politico-cultic ostentation, Datis


as Persian admiral was able to sacrifice no less than 300 talents of frankincense


on the altar at Delos (Hdt. 6.97.2). True, that will hardly have been a spontane-


ous gesture, but it must reflect the scale of availability of the commodity, while


the two episodes together serve as further reminders of the primordial role of


sanctuaries, in Greece just as everywhere else, as the milieux of actions with


major economic impact.


Thereafter attestations multiply, reaching beyond the Aegean, Peloponnese,

and Sicily even to Scythia if Herodotus’ report of frankincense being used


there as an ingredient in an overnight face-pack is to be believed.^57 The par-


ticular link with Aphrodite recurs with Xenophon’s gift of 100 prostitutes


to her sanctuary in Corinth in 464/3,^58 and soon afterwards Melanippides


of Melos had some of the Danaides ‘seeking out the sacred tears of libanos


and fragrant dates and kasia, soft Syrian seeds’,^59 but most of what follows


is Athenian, not least because of Athenaeus’ card-index-style knowledge of


Athenian comedy. By the 420s frankincense had become a well-known import


from ‘Syria’,^60 available from the part of the agora where the incense-sellers


congregated,^61 and had become a standard component of the ritual at the start


of various formal occasions, ranging from contests^62 through offerings to the


gods, perhaps especially at the new moon,^63 to (by the 380s) marriages.^64 By


the mid-fourth century if not earlier, with the shift of custom and terminology


from ‘symposion’ to ‘second table’, myrrh, cassia, and frankincense were being


seen as appropriate components for the later stages of a banquet.^65 Plainly,


too, by then frankincense had become comparatively inexpensive:  even if


Antiphanes’ misanthropic Timon was exceptional in grudging an obol’s worth


for all the gods and goddesses,^66 nonetheless frankincense and various kinds of


honey-cakes were seen as appropriate examples for the moralising trope that


modest offerings made with real piety are more acceptable to the gods than


expensive ostentation.^67 If to this already wide range of uses and occasions


we add the uses of aromatics in perfumes and cosmetics, as materia medica, and

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