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Outlander Inspired Highland Bee Silver Stud Earrings

$30.95
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Inspired by the title of the ninth book in the Outlander Series, "Go Tell The Bees that I Am Gone" these delicate Highland Bee Silver Stud Earrings feature a traditional honey bee with Highland Knotwork woven into its wings.

Crafted entirely of 925 sterling silver, this piece is dispatched to us directly from the heart of Edinburgh's famous Royal Mile near the Old Canongate Tollbooth and the Canongate Kirk. Both of these locations are featured in the Outlander books.

See below for more information about the relevance of honey bees:

‘Telling the bees’ is an old European custom (which made its way to the United States), in which bees would be told of important events in their keeper's lives, such as births, marriages, or deaths. 
The origins of this practice are not really known, but it is thought to be linked to the ancient belief that bees' had the ability to bridge the natural world and the afterlife.
There were many different ways that bees would be told of news.

For example, following a death in the household the women of the house would cover the hives with black, whilst softly humming mournful tunes or sayings such as –
"The master's dead, but don't you go; Your mistress will be a good mistress to you."
"Little bee, our lord is dead; Leave me not in my distress.”
One instruction from the Carolina mountains of the United States simply stated -
"You knock on each hive, so, and say, 'Lucy is dead.'"
If a family failed to tell the bees of a death, serious calamity for the household would follow!


Bees were also to be told of happy events, and a 1950s article in the Dundee Courier in Scotland described the practice of inviting bees to the wedding. At these, the hive might be decorated, and a slice of wedding cake left by the hive.