A profitable instruction of the perfect ordering of Bees/First Treatise/Chapter 2

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A profitable instruction of the perfect ordering of Bees (1579)
Thomas Hill
First Treatise, Chapter 2
2612884A profitable instruction of the perfect ordering of Bees — First Treatise, Chapter 21579Thomas Hill

Who firſt taught the preparation and increaſing of Bees, and founde oute the vſe of Honny. Cap. ij.

THe reporte goeth, that one Ariſtomachus firſt founde out and taught the increaſing of Bees, whome Plinie writeth to be ſo earneſt in the ſame, that ſetting apart al other affayres, he only ſtudied night & day how he might beſt intreate and vſe Bees, according to their kinde. But others aſcribe this inuention to one Thaſsius, who (as they ſaye) deſerued no leſſe commendation, both for his diligence and ſkill among Bees: but this he ſpecially followed in the fielde, and that farre from the Towne. And of this the common people (as by a nickname) no more named him Thaſsius, but Agrius, for his wilde or rather ſtraunge life, whiche he then led in the fielde, Whome Plinie alſo affyrmeth to haue written a Booke of the increaſing and multiplying of Bees. And Columella ascribeth this inuention, to the inhabitaunts of the hill (named Hymetus) being in the Countrey of Attica, for there (ſaieth he,) was one Ericthonius, who taught (as mē write) the true and perfect ordering of thē: Plinie againe aſcribeth the inuention of Hony to one Ariſteus a man of Athens. Diodorus Siculus in the firſte Booke of hys makes, writeth, that Curetes, a people of Creta, {{bl|did firſte finde out the Hony,}} Macrobius aſcribeth the ſame to one Saturnus. Others to the Theſſalians. And many to Meliſſus, an auntient King of Creta, others to Naſſus Liber Pater, thus writing, that Liber hath obtayned the renowne for finding out of Honnye.