The
Common Fig is widely grown
for its edible fruit throughout
its natural range in the
Mediterranean region, Iran,
Pakistan and northern India,
and also in other areas
of the world with a similar
climate, including Louisiana,
California, Georgia, Oregon,
Texas, South Carolina, and
Washington in the United
States, south-western British
Columbia in Canada, Nuevo
León and Coahuila
in northeastern Mexico,
as well as Australia, Chile,
and South Africa. Figs can
also be found in continental
climate with hot summer,
as far north as Hungary,
and can be harvested up
to three times per year.
Thousands of cultivars,
most unnamed, have been
developed or come into existence
as human migration brought
the fig to many places outside
its natural range. It has
been an important food crop
for thousands of years,
and was also thought to
be highly beneficial in
the diet.
The
edible fig is one of the
first plants that was cultivated
by humans. Nine subfossil
figs of a parthenocarpic
type dating to about 9400–9200
BC were found in the early
Neolithic village Gilgal
I (in the Jordan Valley,
13 km north of Jericho).
The find predates the domestication
of wheat, barley, and legumes,
and may thus be the first
known instance of agriculture.
It is proposed that they
may have been planted and
cultivated intentionally,
one thousand years before
the next crops were domesticated
(wheat and rye).[2]
Figs
were also a common food
source for the Romans. Cato
the Elder, in his De Agri
Cultura, lists several strains
of figs grown at the time
he wrote his handbook: the
Mariscan, African, Herculanean,
Saguntine, and the black
Tellanian (De agri cultura,
ch. 8). The fruits were
used, among other things,
to fatten geese for the
production of a precursor
of foie gras.
Figs
can be eaten fresh or dried,
and used in jam-making.
Most commercial production
is in dried or otherwise
processed forms, since the
ripe fruit does not transport
well, and once picked does
not keep well. |