Beekeeping folklore, traditions and customs

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BernardBlack

Field Bee
Joined
May 7, 2016
Messages
565
Reaction score
46
Location
Co. Armagh
Hive Type
National
Number of Hives
5
Interesting read. Some of the latter sentences remind me of my pondering whether folktales of faeries originate from bees. I find it plausible.
 
telling the bees is a tradition all over Europoe, as for the queen's beekeeper telling the bees she'd pegged out. I very much suspect that this is where the 'tradition' started rather than there being a long tradition of beekeeping monarchs. After all, the saxe Coburgs have to maintain the fiction that they are keen environmentralists.
King Hywel ap Cadell (880-950 AD) Aka Hywel dda (Hywel the good) last king of the Britons, codified a set of laws to protect bees, beekeepers and mead makers. He also set up a few aws to give women a more equal status (no wonder fat Hal the eighth quickly scrapped those laws!) Whether he had bees himself, who knows? but as every monastery and manor kept bees in those days then yes, probably.
 
A fascinating read. It seems that many BKs talk to their bees, doubtless for a variety of reasons. What ever those reasons may be the main impression given is of conveying respect to those bees and this will be reflected in the ways the bees are handled. I'm none too sure the bees are linguistically inclined.
It would be interesting to know more variables before committing to a view on whether bees followed funeral processions. What time of year, the weather etc.. It seems sad that such tales relate to death - any tales of bee "celebration" at the return of a BK who may have been unable to tend them [perhaps through serving in war, being incapacitated by illness, having been imprisoned ...]? This all hovers around a different current thread touching on anthropomorphism, perhaps.
 
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Talking to bees is - in my view - equivalent to talking to rocks.
The speaker feels better, the intended recipient of the words feels nothing.
 

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