The same as they are today - the fruit of the vine.
As the people's of biblical times were agrarian for the most part, there are Scriptures to metaphorically describe blood as the color of Grape Juice, or the ripened grapes referring to mankind as being ready for harvest. See this one:
Luke 6:44New King James Version (NKJV)
44 For every tree is known by its own fruit. For men do not gather figs from thorns, nor do they gather grapes from a bramble bush.
Grapes
Revelation 19:15
His wife created it for him. It has something to do with the bible and revelations.
A vineyard is a places where grapes are grown (on vines) for making into wine.
The term 'grapes of wrath' is a biblical allusion. There is no one element in the story that corresponds to the grapes. It is referring to a passage that talks figuratively aout God judging the wicked by trampling on them like grapes in a winepress. The passage is in the bible in Revelation 14:14-20.
The title "The Grapes of Wrath" was inspired by a line in the "Battle Hymn of the Republic," which was suggested to John Steinbeck by his first wife, Carol Henning.
No, the quote "Don't roust your faith bird-high an' you won't do no crawlin' with the worms" is not from the Bible. It is a line from John Steinbeck's novel "The Grapes of Wrath." It reflects the Joad family's struggle to maintain their faith and dignity in the face of hardship.
A group of grapes is called a bunch of grapes.
The smaller bunch has 24 grapes.
John Steinbeck cited the Bible as a significant influence on the structure and prose style of "The Grapes of Wrath." He sought to emulate the Biblical style of storytelling to convey the epic and moral dimensions of the Joad family's journey during the Great Depression.
The collective nouns for 'grapes' are a bunch of grapes and a cluster of grapes.
Vinifera grapes are European grapes that provide the primary source of wine and table grapes.