The pistachio tree is native to
Iran and
Central Asia.
Archaeological evidence shows that pistachio seeds were a common food as early as 6750 BCE. The earliest archeological evidence of pistachio consumption goes back to the Bronze Age Central Asia and comes from
Djarkutan, modern Uzbekistan. The Romans introduced pistachio trees from Asia to Europe in the first century AD. They are cultivated across Southern Europe and North Africa.
Theophrastus described it as a
terebinth-like tree with
almond-like nuts from
Bactria. It appears in
Dioscorides' writings as
pistákia (πιστάκια), recognizable as
P. vera by its comparison to
pine nuts.
Pliny the Elder wrote in his
Natural History that
pistacia, "well known among us", was one of the trees unique to Syria, and that the
seed was introduced into Italy by the Roman
proconsul in Syria,
Lucius Vitellius the Elder (in office in 35 AD), and into
Hispania at the same time by
Flaccus Pompeius. The manuscript
De observatione ciborum (
On the Observance of Foods) by
Anthimus, from the early sixth century, implies that
pistacia remained well-known in Europe in
late antiquity. An article on pistachio tree cultivation was brought down in
Ibn al-'Awwam's 12th-century agricultural work,
Book on Agriculture.
Archaeologists have found evidence from excavations at
Jarmo in northeastern Iraq for the consumption of Atlantic pistachio. In 1904 and 1905,
David Fairchild of the
United States Department of Agriculture introduced hardier
cultivars to California collected from China, but it was not promoted as a commercial crop until 1929.
Walter T. Swingle's pistachios from Syria had already fruited well at
Niles, California, by 1917. The first commercial pistachio harvest in California took place in 1976. By 2008, U.S. pistachio production rivaled that of Iran. Drought and cold weather in Iran led to severe declines in production, while U.S. production was increasing. At that time, pistachios were Iran's second-most important export product, after the oil and gas sector. By 2020, there were 150,000 pistachio farmers in Iran, approximately 70% of whom were small-scale producers using inefficient manual picking and processing techniques. There were 950 far larger U.S. producers, using highly efficient mechanized production techniques. ==See also==