A History of Herbalism: Cure, Cook and Conjure
By Emma Kay
4/5
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About this ebook
Emma Kay
Emma is a post-graduate historian and former senior museum worker. Now, food historian, author and prolific collector of Kitchenalia. She lives in the Cotswolds with her husband and young son. Her articles have appeared in publications including BBC History Magazine, The Daily Express, Daily Mail and Times Literary Supplement. She has contributed historic food research for a number of television production companies and featured several times on Talk Radio Europe, BBC Hereford and Worcester, BBC Coventry and Warwickshire and LifeFM.In 2018 she appeared in a ten-part series for the BBC and Hungry Gap Productions, 'The Best Christmas Food Ever' and on BBC Countryfile, co-presenting a feature exploring the heritage of the black pear. She has delivered talks for Bath Literature Festival, Stroud Book Festival, 1 Royal Crescent, Bath, The Women’s Institute and Freckleton Library among others.Emma has had six books published including: Dining with the Georgians (2014), Dining with the Victorians (2015), Cooking up History: Chefs of the Past (2017), Vintage Kitchenalia (2017), More than a Sauce: A Culinary History of Worcestershire (2018), Stinking Bishops and Spotty Pigs: A History of Gloucestershire's Food and Drink (2019). She is currently researching for several new titles.Emma is a member of The Guild of Food Writers.
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Reviews for A History of Herbalism
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The book starts with an introduction that lists herbs for various purposes and then takes you on a brief world history tour of herbalism, starting with the Greeks and Chinese. Throughout the book examples of how various herbs are used are employed from sources from multiple countries. There are three chapters. Chapter 1 goes over specific British herbalists, followed by information on those who worked in adjacent fields (sellers, hospitals, gardens, illustrators). Chapter 2 deals with magic and medicine, giving individual A-Z lists for both topics. Each listing mentions an anecdote or usage from a historic source. The book isn’t being comprehensive, there are only a few usages per herb, but it’s a great compilation that’s enlightening without being boring. Chapter 3 is on how herbs have been used in cooking. Here the author translates a number of interesting recipes. Be aware, with a few exceptions these are direct historical translations, meaning there are no measurements, so unless you’re used to using old cookbooks or are a trained chef, you’ll have a lot of experimentation ahead of you if you decide to make one of these recipes. The recipes are organized by topic, with most of them employing multiple herbs.I was impressed with the breadth of sources Kay used. I learned about quite a few interesting British and medieval herbals (some of which you can find online as they are out of copyright), as well as herbs and herbals from other countries (including Nigeria, Japan, and the Aztec empire). I was impressed by the number of countries with written herbals predating the modern period, and with the author’s including recipes and herbal usages from so many of them.The book ends with substantial notes and a bibliography.There are a decent number of black and white photographs to accompany the text. The text often jumps from one herb or topic to another with little to no transition, which I found delightful as it maintained interest when reading the book in its entirety, though some might find it disorienting.This is a great book. It tackles a broad topic and has done an excellent job of maintaining interest while being enlightening. Even if you’ve read several books on herbs and herbals you’ll find something new here.(review copy via Netgalley)
Book preview
A History of Herbalism - Emma Kay
Introduction
The gentian’s bluest fringes
Are curling in the sun;
In dusty pods the milkweed
Its hidden silk has spun.¹
It is quite hard to define a herb; Rosalind Northcote described them thus: ‘a herb is a plant, green and aromatic and fit to eat, but it is impossible to deny that there are several undoubted herbs that are not aromatic, a few more grey than green, and one or two unpalatable, if not unwholesome.’² So there you have it – the definition, if somewhat vague and incomplete, of a herb in its simplest terms. Many books about herbs tend to include a myriad of miscellaneous plants and all the spices as well. This is probably because spices are often traditionally lumped together with herbs as generic medicines or culinary additions. Whilst you may find reference to some plants and roots which are not strictly herbs in this book, you will not find any information relating to spices. I wanted this to be a book that focused specifically on the properties of herbs where possible.
Blue gentians.
The World Health Organization (WHO) refers to herbs as ‘herbal materials, herbal preparations, and finished herbal products that contain whole plants, parts of plants, or other plant materials, including leaves, bark, berries, flowers, and roots, and/or their extracts as active ingredients intended for human therapeutic use or for other benefits in humans and sometimes animals’.³
I find classifying is essential to understanding herbs and throughout this book you will discover the wide and complex use of plants in magic, cooking and medicine, the three areas that made the most sense to me in terms of herbology.
In 1895 a remarkable thing happened. Alicia Amherst published a list of herbs that she cited as belonging to the fifteenth century, from a manuscript unearthed within the pages of an old cookery book. Since then, several researchers have identified this comprehensive list as likely to have been compiled around the beginning of the 1500s, with the handwriting consistent of that used within the reign of Henry VIII. They also identified a potential author, as one Thomas Fourmond, or Fromond, who was the owner of land in both Carshalton and Cheam. He died around 1542.⁴ The ‘Fromond list’ was reclassified by John Harvey in 1989, according to Alicia’s original list, which was then comprehensively reformatted by the historic gardener and author Sylvia Landsberg in 2003.
To me this list provides a useful guide to English medieval herb classification, representing a timeless approach to indexing the various properties of herbs, their uses and character.
Herbs for pottage
Agrimony, Alexanders, astrologia longa, A. rotunda, avens, basil, beet, betony, borage, cabbage, caraway, chervil, chives, clary, colewort, columbine, coriander, daisy, dandelion, dill, dittander, fennel, good king henry, hart’s-tongue, langdebeef, leek, lettuce, lupin, mallow, marigold (pot), marjoram, mint, nepp, nettle (red), oculus Christi, orach, parsley, patience, pepperwort, radish, rape, safflower, sage, spinach, thistle, milk, thyme, valerian, violet, wood sorrel, (sowthistle).
Valerian at Oxford Botanic Garden and Arboretum. (Emma Kay)
Herbs for sauce
Dittander, harts-tongue, masterwort, mints, parsley, pellitory, sorrel, violet, (garlic mustard), (wood sorrel).
Herbs for the cup (for infusing in water or wine)
Carnation, clary, cost, costmary, endive, hyssop, marjoram, marigold (pot), rosemary, rue, chamomile, horehound.
Herbs for salad
Alexanders, borage, calamint, chickweed, chives, cress (French), daisies, dandelion, fennel, heartsease, mints, nettle (red), parsley, primrose buds, purslane, rampion, ramsons, rocket, violets, burnet, cresses.
Herbs to distil
Betony, dragons (tarragon), endive, eyebright, hyssop, mugwort, rose (red), rosemary, sage, scabious, silverweed, water pepper, wormwood.
Roots and bulbs
Carrots, eryngo, parsnips, radish, saffron, turnips, (onions).
Herbs to taste and/or smell
Basil, carnation, dropwort, dill, garlic, germander, marjoram (sweet), melons, poppy (garden), Solomon’s seal, vervain, (wallflower).
Herbs for a herber or ornamental garden
Trees: almond, bay, peach, pine, plum; Shrubs: gooseberry, gourds, roses (white), vine; Herbaceous plants: campion, columbine, cornflour, hellebore, lilies, peony (roman), safflower.⁵
As Fromond’s list suggests, with names like ‘Good King Henry’, hart’s-tongue, masterwort and silverweed, so many herbs and plants, once revered and praised for their therapeutic and curative abilities, have been lost from our diets. Goosefoot, which does not appear on the Fromond list but was also known as fat hen, pigweed and lambs’ quarters, can be eaten raw in salads or cooked like spinach and has been consumed since Neolithic times. Whilst still popular across Asia and southern Africa, it somehow lost its charm in northern Europe, although its favoured family member, quinoa, is now eaten widely everywhere.
Goosefoot, so called because its leaves are shaped like that of a goose, belongs to the amaranth family, and writing in 1597, John Gerard informs us that it grew abundantly, but was never considered to have any medicinal value. Rather, its leaves, were regularly added to salads. Gerard also points out that it was known to be poisonous to pigs.⁶
Quinoa is a species of goosefoot. Similar to buckwheat, quinoa was valued for its nutritional attributes during the Victorian period. Once the staple diet of Peruvians, the seeds were initially considered a little unpalatable to European and American tastes, who preferred to boil the young shoots and stems, serving them as an alternative to asparagus. The young quinoa leaves were also added to salads, while older leaves were devoured as boiled greens.⁷
You would also be hard pushed to find a medieval English recipe book that omits the flowering tansy. Fashioned into cakes or fried egg dishes, this herb was also thought to be extremely useful in alleviating a host of medical issues as well as repelling insects. Today, most people would not even recognize the name.
In earlier times borage was cultivated in abundance and employed as a healer of wounds. You can find numerous culinary recipes of the past in which this ginseng-like herb features. (See Chapter 3 to get some ideas of how to utilize borage.) Chickweed – of which there are many varieties – was a plant known for its ability to ease eczema, or in a more ancient capacity, as a motivator of birds to hatch. Sorrel was integral to the preparation of salads, sauces and vinegars, while mugwort, along with agnus castus, could counteract tiredness. Another disregarded herb, rue, is strong scented and was widely believed to protect people from snake and spider bites, bees, hornets and wasps. Long-discarded figwort could keep you healthy if worn around the neck, while versatile angelica acted as a shield against witchcraft.⁸
The snapdragon – so called for when pressed open, it resembles the mouth of a creature which is biting or snapping – was also once highly valued for resisting witchcraft and its leaves were sometimes used to relieve tumours and ulcers. In Russia, the snapdragon was at one time abundantly cultivated for its oil which was by all accounts comparable to olive oil.⁹ These florae represent just a small sample of preloved and multifunctional plants that have become redundant.
Early Greek physicians recorded extensive lists of herbs and their restorative powers before the Romans came along with their strange magical and pagan notions of medicine. It was Greek physician Galen of Pergamon, with his legitimization of Hippocrates’ ‘four humors’ that established the first recognized science of anatomy, culminating in an extended period where all other related ancient texts were abandoned.
Hippocrates, or ‘the father of medicine’, took Plato’s notions of the four classical elements: earth, air, water and fire and created the ‘four humors’. Hippocrates’ four humeral theories are as follows: blood (the air element) being hot and moist; phlegm (the water element) which is cold and moist; yellow bile (the fire element) which is hot and dry; and black bile, or the earth element, which is cold and dry. The theory behind this is the need for both the humors and elements to remain balanced throughout the body in order to maintain general wellness. Additional plants and herbs were applied accordingly to restore any imbalances. For example, if your blood pressure was high, or you had too much yellow bile, a cooling herb such as sage might be administered.
Hippocrates.
The most universally recognized form of herbal medicine is that which originated in China. Chinese herbal science was born out of a broad philosophy of both masculine yang and feminine yin, the latter hot and powerful, the former cold and yielding, each combining with the five elements relating to water, fire, earth, metal and wood – a similar take on Hippocrates’ black bile, yellow bile, phlegm and blood. Red plants were fiery and used to combat fevers; think of the old idiom of fighting fire with fire. Liquids extracted from yellow plants were considered compatible with kidney conditions, while anything heart-shaped, including the leaves or bulbs, were rationalized as being healthy to the heart and pulse.¹⁰
Shen nong Ben cao jing (The Divine Farmers’ Materia Medica) is a compilation of three volumes of oral histories recorded in third-century China. It is understood to be the first traceable authority on medicine which categorized well over 300 herbs into three separate groups: upper (harmless to humans), middle (therapeutic but potentially toxic) and lower (those that are poisonous). For example, Angelica biserrata, from the Angelica family, was considered non-toxic and was used to relieve pain as well as something dubbed ‘running piglet’, a term referring to heart palpitations and anxiety – akin to a small pig running around inside your body.¹¹
While China developed their herbal remedies, other cultures like the Sumerians (modern-day Iraq) were recording their recipes on clay tablets.¹²
There are tablets belonging to Yale University’s Babylonian Collection with detailed inscriptions for culinary recipes, deemed the oldest-known recipes in the world. Three of these tablets come with a date of circa 1730
BC
, the fourth being around 1,000 years later. All originate from the Mesopotamian region. One lists the ingredients for twenty-five different stews and broths. Jean Bottéro was a French historian who specialized in Mesopotamian archaeology, researching, writing and lecturing about these ancient culinary tomes. In his 1987 paper, ‘The Culinary Tablets at Yale’, Bottéro noted that the most popular supplementary ingredients for almost all the recipes included leeks, onions and garlic. In addition, cumin, coriander and juniper berries featured regularly, as did mint. The tablets contain intricate cooking instructions including the following translated vocabulary: mixing, slicing, squeezing, shredding, crumbing, straining and filtering. Bottéro’s research paper also contains several translated complete recipes, like this for raised turnips:
Native Chinese herbalist, 1800s.
Meat is not needed. You set water. You throw fat in … Onion, dorsal thorn (unknown), coriander, cumin and kanasu (unknown), leek and garlic, which you squeeze together and spread on the dish. Onion and mint which you add to the crock.¹³
It is difficult to comprehend that these elaborate recipes and instructions belong to communities living 4,000 years ago and to appreciate how keenly they relied on basic vegetables and herbs.
The Sumerians brewed special liquors made from herbs and grains. These beers are recorded in the Epic of Gilgamesh and were drunk throughout the day on a daily basis. Gilgamesh is an epic Mesopotamian text, compiled in the second millennium
BC
, with the eponymous hero’s challenges and adventures charted across several narratives. In the story of ‘The Magic Plant’, Gilgamesh seeks out the plant, which some modern translators have likened to buckthorn, in order to restore and rejuvenate his life force. Lured by the surroundings of paradise, Gilgamesh takes his eyes off the plant for a moment, providing an opportunistic snake with a nice green dinner. The symbolic snake then sheds its skin. It has received the benefits of rejuvenation and not mankind. There are numerous tales in European folk literature alluding to the ancient Greek legend of one serpent spying on its friend being killed, before leaving the site and then returning with a special herb that it presses against its dead friend, immediately restoring the snake back to life.¹⁴ All these stories emphasize the extent to which plants were venerated, as nature’s way of restoring one’s health and well-being.
The Libellus de Medicinalibus Indorum Herbis (Little Book of the Medicinal Herbs of the Indians) or, more commonly known as the Badianus Manuscript is an Aztec herbal, originally translated in 1552, but which fell into the hands of many others and has been translated several times since. The Mexican plant life within this manuscript was categorized as either woody or herbaceous. These were then sub-categorized as edible, medicinal, ornamental or economic. The text of the Badianus Manuscript is beautifully illustrated, and is composed of sixty-three folios divided into thirteen chapters which group together a variety of ailments and remedies. The following remedy for catarrah, called Gravedo from the translation of Emily Wollcott, follows:
Gravedo
Qui narium distillation seu coriza infestatur herbas atochietl, et Tzompili-huizxihuitl olfaciet et ita gravedini subveniet (those troubled with a dripping nose or cold are to sniff the herbs Atochietl and tzompilihuizxihuitl and help the cold thus).¹⁵
Crossing the ancient continents again, Japanese traditional medicine is known as Kampo and it works on the premise that the mind and gut are inseparable. It is also based on many of the same principles as Chinese medicine and is woven into the fabric of the Japanese contemporary health care system. Shiso is a Japanese herb from the mint family with all the flavours of citrus, basil and coriander, to name a few. Typically, shiso is used widely in Japanese cooking, particularly in sushi, tempuras and sashimi dishes. Japanese parsley, or mitsuba, has the taste and look of parsley, but it is also similar to celery and is primarily used as a garnish or an addition to soups. The first edition of the Japanese Pharmacopoeia was published in the 1800s and in 2016 an English version was made available. Essentially it is an official document listing all the criteria for and necessary testing of medicines in Japan and includes complex WHO guidelines for assessing the quality of herbal medicines. Many plants are listed in the Pharmacopoeia inclusive of Ephedra, which has been known to be fatal, the geranium herb or herb-Robert, known to treat diarrhoea and issues with the liver amongst others. There are also herbs including Leonurus or mother-wort, which has European folklorist connections with protection from evil spirits, mint and plantain.¹⁶
In 2002, the World Health Organization reported that around 80 per cent of people in Africa relied on traditional medicine. Many parts of rural Africa continue to rely on traditional healers who prescribe medicinal plants that are both affordable and readily accessible. For many African communities, traditional healers also provide counselling, family guidance and an individual level of treatment developed out of a personal understanding of the patient’s environment and circumstances. Herbal remedies including wormwood, of which the leaves or bark are considered valuable to sufferers of diabetes, rooibos for cholic, honeybush for chronic catarrh, Umckalaobo (African geranium) for acute respiratory infections and so on.¹⁷
Herbs have been used medicinally for thousands, if not millions of years. Some of the first recorded are those used by the Egyptians. Herbs were placed in lodestones, which are magnetic mineral rocks and these rocks were then applied to various parts of the body, along with spices, herbal drinks and the burning of herbs to assist with curing diseases and healing a variety of illnesses.¹⁸
Interestingly, the Egyptians, as ratified in one of the oldest medical herbals of ancient Egypt, the Ebers Papyrus, maintain the theory that ‘every disease to which men are liable, is occasioned by the substances whereon they feed’, meaning there was once little distinction between edible food plants and medicinal plants. Dating to around 1500
BC
, but authenticated as much earlier, this medical herbal is named after the Egyptologist Georg Ebers and contains around 700 remedies and formulas.
Diseases in ancient Egypt were interpreted as demons that required an exorcism and medicine was just one branch of magic with which to exorcize them. Incantations to expel evil spirits were varied and complex and were categorized as the Maklu (burning), Ti’i (headaches), Asakki marsuti (fever), Labartu (hag-demon) and Nis kati (raising of the hand) One of these incantation reads:
African witchdoctors, 1882.
Arise ye great gods, hear my complaint,
Grant me justice, take cognizance of my condition.
I have made an image of my sorcerer and sorceress.
I have humbled myself before you and bring to you my cause,
Because of the evil they have done,
Of the impure things which they have handled.
May she die! Let me live!
May her charm, her witchcraft, her sorcery be broken.
May the plucked sprig of the binu tree purify me.
May it release me; may the evil odor of my mouth be scattered to the winds.
May the Mashtakal herb [probably soapwort] which fils the earth cleanse me.
Before you let me shine like the kankal herb,
Let me be brilliant and pure as the lardu herb.
Similar perhaps to Africa, India also had its physician-sages. The Ayurveda (Knowledge of Life) is a book of collected Hindu teachings containing the botanical and spiritual principles of Indian medicine. The ancient Indian text RigVeda tells us that herbs were present some three eras before the Gods were even born. It cites over 1,000 medicinal plants.
The Ayurveda, like that confirmed by so many other cultures, highlights the importance of the five elements: earth, air, fire, water and ether (the element that was once thought to occupy the upper regions of space). It was essential for these energies to maintain their balance or a person’s health became compromised. Cool, calming herbs such as chamomile were used to soothe the stomach; cinnamon and nutmeg could increase a person’s stamina, while ginger, cardamom and turmeric were considered ideal for stabilizing the body as a whole.¹⁹
The Romans made great efforts to acclimatize and cultivate new plants and herbs in England. The earliest books on herbs and their properties relied on translating the works of famous Greek and Roman botanists like Dioscorides and Pliny, together with the studies of Arabic physicians. But these were simply inspired by even earlier ancient theories, particularly those that recorded the healing of animals – birds and other beasts, creatures who ingested herbs to counteract poisons. Archaic texts inform us that scorpions ate white hellebore as an antidote to aconite, weasels ate rue before engaging in combat, hawks applied the juice of hawkweed and swallows celandine to restore the eyesight of their young.²⁰
Very early healers believed spirits lived in plants, rocks and flowers and, by actively investigating some of these things, they learnt that certain roots, herbs, berries and leaves were able to stave off pain and some illnesses. In the Middle Ages, the planets, particularly Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Venus, Mercury and the sun and moon, were celestial bodies thought to possess their own personalities. Pick up any western European book on herbs right up until the nineteenth century and you will find that many, if not most, correlated the properties of herbs directly to specific planets. In medieval art some planets were depicted with human features or personified in human form.²¹
As such, the planets were integral to astrology and the pseudoscience of astrological signs. Pseudo-Apuleius is the name given to Pseudo-Apuleius Herbarius or Herbarium Apuleii Platonici, which attributes this fourth-century text to the Roman poet, Apuleius of Madaura. Many scholars have refuted its provenance believing it instead to be the work of several different authors. In his Philosophy of Natural Magic, sixteenth-century German occultist and scholar Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim discusses the way in which herbs are aligned to specific signs and plants within the text of Apuleius.
These include sage to Aries, straight-growing vervain to Taurus, bending vervain to Gemini, comfrey to Cancer, sow-bread (cyclamen) to Leo, calamint to Virgo, mugwort to Libra, scorpion-grass (forget-me-nots) to Scorpio, pimpernel to Sagittarius, docks to Capricorn, dragon’s-wort (tarragon) to Aquarius and hartwort (a Mediterranean herb) to Pisces.²²
The planets and how they aligned influenced the four elements within the body. Zodiac charts were used to make a diagnosis and whichever astrological sign you were born under also played a part in what treatment you received. There was superstition with herbs; some needed to be gathered at special hours of the day and at different lunar cycles, and even the way they were plucked, be it up or down, could affect their healing powers.
Magic in early medieval Europe specifically involved the process of either harming or controlling. The oldest surviving English herbal is Bald’s Leechbook, which dates to the tenth century.
As well as the