Approximately
ten years ago, I posted a blog about citrus fruit as introduced by Alexander’s Macedonians from India
(see: What
Alexander did for us).
This certainly was
not an isolated case if we look at the work of Theophrastus, a contemporary of Aristotle and Alexander (see: Theophrastus,
philosopher and botanist). He studied plants that came from Persia, Afghanistan,
and the Indus Valley. He introduced the Greeks to mangos,
cardoons (or artichoke thistle), jujubes (also called Chinese dates),
pistachios, and tamarind. Newly imported plants were cinnamon, banyan (a fig
typically from India),
as well as frankincense and myrrh.
One day during
his invasion of India
in 327 BC, Alexander had bananas for
dessert and he enjoyed the fruit so much that he wanted to share it.
Eventually, bananas traveled to the Middle East,
where they earned their Arabic name of banan,
meaning finger.
Arrian revealed that in
325 BC, Nearchus had found sugarcane.
He described it as “a reed that brings forth honey without the help of bees”.
In antiquity, sugarcane was basically used as a medicine by Greek and Roman
physicians, as documented by Pliny the Elder in the 1st century AD.
Rice was another
food the king introduced into Macedonia after his campaign in Central
Asia, and it appears that the well-known dish of Plov or Pilaf spread from Macedonia,
throughout Greece
and the Balkans (see: The origins of rice in ancient Macedonia).
Alexander also introduced
Europe to the cotton from India.
It is said that the Macedonians started wearing cotton clothes which were
more appropriate for the Indian climate.
The colorful
floor mosaic of a parakeet from Palace V in Pergamon
now on display at the Museum
of Pergamon in Berlin (see: The
beauty of Alexandrine mosaics) is a rare example of the wide
collection of animals and plants Alexander
sent to Aristotle from the regions he
conquered. The Alexandrine Parakeet was native to South Asia and Southeast Asia.
As Alexander traveled to modern-day
countries such as Turkey, Syria, Lebanon,
Egypt, Iraq, Iran,
Afghanistan, and India, he shared
his serious interest in local cultures and habits with the rest of the world.
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