Because onions are small and their tissues leave
little or no trace, there is no conclusive opinion about the exact location and
time of their birth. Many archaeologists, botanists, and food historians
believe onions originated in central Asia. Other research suggests onions were
first grown in Iran and West Pakistan.
It is presumed our predecessors discovered and
started eating wild onions very early – long before farming or even writing was
invented. Very likely, this humble vegetable was a staple in the prehistoric
diet.
Most researchers agree the onion has been cultivated
for 5000 years or more. Since onions grew wild in various regions, they were
probably consumed for thousands of years and domesticated simultaneously all
over the world. Onions may be one of the earliest cultivated crops because they
were less perishable than other foods of the time, were transportable, were
easy to grow, and could be grown in a variety of soils and climates. In
addition, the onion was useful for sustaining human life. Onions prevented
thirst and could be dried and preserved for later consumption when food might
be scarce. While the place and time of the onion’s origin is still a mystery,
many documents from very early times describe its importance as a food and its
use in art, medicine, and mummification.
Onions grew in Chinese gardens as early as 5000
years ago and they are referenced in some of the oldest Vedic writings from
India. In Egypt, onions can be traced back to 3500 B.C. There is evidence that
the Sumerians were growing onions as early as 2500 B.C. One Sumerian text dated
to about 2500 B.C. tells of someone plowing over the city governor’s onion
patch.
In Egypt, onions were considered to be an object of
worship. The onion symbolized eternity to the Egyptians who buried onions along
with their Pharaohs. The Egyptians saw eternal life in the anatomy of the onion
because of its circle-within-a-circle structure. Paintings of onions appear on
the inner walls of the pyramids and in the tombs of both the Old Kingdom and
the New Kingdom. The onion is mentioned as a funeral offering, and depicted on
the banquet tables of the great feasts –both large, peeled onions and slender,
immature ones. They were shown upon the altars of the gods.
Frequently, Egyptian priests are pictured holding
onions in his hand or covering an altar with a bundle of their leaves or roots.
In mummies, onions have frequently been found in the pelvic regions of the
body, in the thorax, flattened against the ears, and in front of the collapsed
eyes. Flowering onions have been found on the chest, and onions have been found
attached to the soles of the feet and along the legs. King Ramses IV, who died
in 1160 B.C., was entombed with onions in his eye sockets.
Some Egyptologists theorize that onions may have
been used because it was believed that their strong scent and/or magical powers
would prompt the dead to breathe again. Other Egyptologists believe it was
because onions were known for their strong antiseptic qualities, which
construed as magical, would be handy in the afterlife.
Onions were eaten by the Israelites in the Bible. In
Numbers 11:5, the children of Israel lament the meager desert diet enforced by
the Exodus: “We remember the fish, which we did eat in Egypt freely, the
cucumbers and the melons and the leeks and the onions and the garlic.”
In India as early as the sixth century B.C., the
famous medical treatise Charaka – Sanhita celebrates the onion as medicine – a
diuretic, good for digestion, the heart, the eyes, and the joints.
Likewise, Dioscorides, a Greek physician in first century
A.D., noted several medicinal uses of onions. The Greeks used onions to fortify
athletes for the Olympic Games. Before competition, athletes would consume
pounds of onions, drink onion juice, and rub onions on their bodies.
The Romans ate onions regularly and carried them on
journeys to their provinces in England and Germany. Pliny the Elder, Roman’s
keen-eyed observer, wrote of Pompeii’s onions and cabbages. Before he was
overcome and killed by the volcano’s heat and fumes, Pliny the Elder catalogued
the Roman beliefs about the efficacy of the onion to cure vision, induce sleep,
heal mouth sores, dog bites, toothaches, dysentery, and lumbago. Excavators of
the doomed city would later find gardens where, just as Pliny had said, onions
had grown. The bulbs had left behind telltale cavities in the ground. The Roman
gourmet Apicius, credited with writing one of the first cookbooks (which dates
to the eighth and ninth centuries A.D.), included many references to onions.
By the Middle Ages, the three main vegetables of
European cuisine were beans, cabbage, and onions. In addition to serving as a
food for both the poor and the wealthy, onions were prescribed to alleviate
headaches, snakebites, and hair loss. They were also used as rent payments and
wedding gifts.
Later, the first Pilgrims brought onions with them
on the Mayflower. However, they found that strains of wild onions already grew
throughout North America. Native American Indians used wild onions in a variety
of ways, eating them raw or cooked, as a seasoning or as a vegetable. Such
onions were also used in syrups, as poultices, as an ingredient in dyes, and
even as toys. According to diaries of colonists, bulb onions were planted as
soon as the Pilgrim fathers could clear the land in 1648.
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