The olive tree has always been associated with religious practices, myths and traditions, artistic and cultural manifestations, medicinal and gastronomic uses. In ancient Greece, when women wanted to get pregnant, they would spend long periods in the shade of olive trees. Royal sceptres were made from the wood of olive trees and monarchs, priests and athletes were anointed with olive oil. The leaves were used to make garlands and wreaths for the victors.
The olive tree was considered a symbol of wisdom, peace, abundance and glory.
Six thousand years ago, the Egyptians credited Isis, wife of Osiris, the supreme god of their mythology, with teaching them how to cultivate the olive tree. In the Greek legend, Pallas Athene, Goddess of peace and wisdom, daughter of Zeus, was the mother of the tree under which Remus and Romulus, descendants of the Gods and founders of Rome, were born, since she caused the olive tree to sprout from a single blow and, in her great kindness, taught it how to grow and use it.
In turn, Minerva offered the Romans this divine gift, also an asylum of divinity.
Homer, Squirrel, Sophocles, Virgil, Ovid and Pliny sang of the olive tree:
“And with an olive branch man is completely purified.”
Virgílio, Eneida
“A glorious tree flourishes in our Doric land: our sweet, silvery nursemaid, the olive tree. Born alone and immortal, without fear of enemies, its eternal strength defies rogues young and old, for Zeus and Athena protect it with sleepless eyes.”
Sófocles, Édipo
Almost all religions speak of the olive tree, a tree from distant civilizations, which has a place in the oldest texts:
- In "Genesis" Noah's dove carries an olive branch in its beak to show him that the world is reviving.
- In "Exodus", Yahweh prescribes to Moses the "Holy Anointing" in which olive oil is mixed with rare perfumes.
- In the garden of Gethsemane there are still eight large olive trees that saw Christ pray, weep and die.
- The Koran also sings of the tree that grows on Mount Sinai and refers to the oil that is extracted from it to be transformed into the light of a lamp “like a shining star”.
It has always been the heritage of Mediterranean countries, but nowadays it is widespread everywhere, from Argentina, Australia, Chile, the United States of America, to Japan, Mexico, China and the Republic of South Africa, among others.