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Researchers found pottery vessels at the site that resembled poppy flowers.
Researchers found pottery vessels at the site that resembled poppy flowers and examined whether they had served as containers for the drug. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA
Researchers found pottery vessels at the site that resembled poppy flowers and examined whether they had served as containers for the drug. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA

Israeli archaeologists find traces of opium in 3,500-year-old pottery

This article is more than 1 year old

Archaeologists say find supports theory that drug was used in burial rituals, possibly to ‘enter ecstatic state’

Israeli archaeologists have discovered opium residue in 3,500-year-old pottery pieces, providing evidence to support the theory that the hallucinogenic drug was used in ancient burial rituals.

The joint investigation by the Israel Antiquities Authority and Weizmann Institute of Science began in 2012 when excavations in the central Israeli town of Yehud revealed a series of late bronze-age graves.

Researchers found pottery vessels at the site that resembled poppy flowers – from which opium is derived – dating to the 14th century BC.

They examined whether they had served as containers for the drug, which earlier writing had suggested was used in burial rituals in Canaan, and found “opium residue in eight vessels”, the researchers said.

These were probably “placed in graves for ceremonial meals, rites and rituals performed by the living for their deceased family members”, said Ron Be’eri, an archaeologist with the antiquities authority.

During these ceremonies, “family members or a priest on their behalf” would “attempt to summon the spirit of their dead relatives … and enter an ecstatic state by using opium”, Be’eri said.

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But he acknowledged that much remained unknown about its use in ancient times. “We can only speculate what was done with opium,” he said.

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