Ancient “mad honey” stories get repeated so often online that they’ve turned into a kind of legend: soldiers eat a spoonful, instantly trip, and honey becomes a weapon. Xenophon’s actual account is both more specific and more useful, because it describes a dose-dependent poisoning pattern that looks a lot like what modern clinicians still see in real “mad honey” cases today.
In this guide, we’ll walk through who Xenophon was, what his account really says (without long quotes), what people commonly get wrong, and the most likely modern explanation (rhododendron honey + grayanotoxins) without overclaiming.
We’ll also connect the ancient pattern to modern poisoning reports and finish with the one practical takeaway the story supports: dose matters, and “more” isn’t better.







