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Mad Honey

mad honey, giant bee, rhododendron flower nectar
mad honey, giant bee, rhododendron flower nectar

“mad honey” (μείλι εἰλιγγιῶδες) was known to the Ancient Greek medical writers

The phenomenon we call mad honey — honey poisoned by grayanotoxins from Rhododendron and Azalea — is explicitly known to Hippocratic, Aristotelian, Xenophontic, Dioscoridean, and later medical authors.

They do not use one standardized technical term, but they describe:

  • Vertigo–honey,
  • Narcotic honey,
  • Honey causing staggering, vomiting, cold sweats,
  • Honey that “confuses the mind” (φρενῶν ταραχή),
  • Pontic honey specifically as dangerous.

The earliest and clearest descriptions

Xenophon — Anabasis 4.8.20–21 (c. 370 BCE)

He gives the most famous classical account of toxic honey near Trapezus:

μέλι τῶν κηρίων… ἐγένετο τούτους ἄτοπος ἡ νόσος· πάντες γὰρ οἱ φαγόντες ἐμαίνοντο

“Honey from the combs produced a strange sickness: all who ate it acted mad.”

Symptoms he lists:

  • Vertigo
  • Vomiting
  • Incapacity to stand
  • Temporary paralysis
  • Recovery in 24 hours

This is textbook grayanotoxin poisoning.

Aristotle — Historia Animalium 9.40 (c. 340 BCE)

Aristotle describes toxic honey from the Pontus region:

μέλι ἄτοπον… ποιεῖ μέθην καὶ παρακοπήν

“A peculiar honey… causes drunkenness and derangement.”

He attributes it to flowers of a certain shrub — likely Rhododendron ponticum.

Theophrastus — Historia Plantarum 3.18.5 (c. 300 BCE)

Theophrastus explains why Pontic honey is poisonous:

τὰς ῥοδοδένδρου καὶ ἀνδρόσημου φύσεις

“From the nature of the rhododendron and andromedê shrubs.”

This is the earliest botanical identification of the correct plant source.

Dioscorides — De Materia Medica 2.103 (1st century CE)

From the ancient medical corpus.

He describes poisonous honey:

μέλι Ποντικόν… ἐξ ῥοδοδενδρίνης τῆς φυτῆς

“Pontic honey… from the rhododendron plant.”

Symptoms listed:

  • ἔμετος (vomiting)
  • ζάλη (dizziness)
  • σκότος τῶν ὀφθαλμῶν (darkness of the eyes; visual distortion)
  • ψυχρὸς ἱδρώς (cold sweat)
  • ἀποπληξία ἐοικώς (“stroke-like paralysis,” i.e., collapse)

He classifies it as pharmakon dangerous to ingest but (importantly) potentially medicinal in small, controlled doses.

Galen — De Alimentorum Facultatibus 1.37

Galen distinguishes ordinary honey from:

τὸ μέλι τὸ Ποντικόν τὸ μεθυστικόν

“The inebriating Pontic honey.”

He notes it can cause:

  • ἐξέστηκεν ὁ νοῦς (“the mind stands outside itself”)
  • κατάλυσις τῶν κινήσεων (collapse of motor control)

Again: perfect match to grayanotoxin symptomatology.

The Hippocratic Corpus (5th–4th century BCE)

Not explicit as “mad honey,” but several passages refer to honey causing:

  • εἰλίγγους (vertigo)
  • φρενῶν ἀλλοίωσις (disturbance of the mind)
  • σκοτοδινία (dark-vertigo)

Given geographical circulation, these likely refer to the same thing — though the Hippocratic authors do not give the explicit botanical etiology like Theophrastus or Dioscorides.

Summary: What the Greek medical writers knew

They knew:

  • Honey could become poisonous from certain mountain shrubs.
  • Chief offenders: ῥοδοδένδρον (rhododendron) and ἀνδρόσημον (Andromeda polifolia).
  • The poisoning is non-fatal in most cases.
  • The intoxication is temporary (usually a few hours).
  • The symptoms are:
    • paralysis or collapse
    • vertigo
    • visual distortion
    • sweating
    • madness/frenzy/derangement
    • vomiting

Exactly identical to modern toxicology.

And:

  • They used small amounts medicinally — especially in pharmaka that induce altered states, sedation, or purgation.

Applications

The properties of Pontic honey yield controlled, time-limited delirium.

Galen’s phrase:

ἐξέστηκεν ὁ νοῦς

“the mind stands outside itself”

  • is precisely the language of ec-stasis (ἔκστασις), central to mystery-rite pharmacology.

Dioscorides explicitly permits low-dose ritual/medical use.

Ancient cults knew plants that caused derangement + paralysis + visions, and Pontic honey could easily play a role.