Showing posts with label Solomon's seal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Solomon's seal. Show all posts

Thursday, May 30, 2013

The Wisdom of Solomon and a Misogynist Joke (?!) in a 16th. century herbal


We recently found this large patch of Solomon's Seal Polygonatum multiflorum growing amongst bluebells in the wild flower meadows near Hawthorn Dene on the Durham coast. It's a native species but certainly a garden escape along this coast.


































There are various stories about how it earned its common name but the most likely seem to relate to the disc-shaped scars on the surface of its rhizomes or to the pattern of vascular bundles in the rhizome that are revealed if you cut it into thin slices (for herbal use - see below), which supposedly look like royal seals with Hebrew writing. How this is linked to Solomon, he of 700 wives and 300 concubines, remains a mystery. John Gerard quotes the story in his Herbal of 1597. 

The reason Gerard included it in his herbal was that the plant has a history of use in medicine that dates back to the days of the ancient Greek physician Dioscorides, especially for treating bruises and broken bones. Gerard says that "the root of Solomons seale stamped while it is fresh and greene, and applied, taketh away in one night, or two at the most, any bruise, blacke or blew spots gotten by falls or womens wilfulnesse, in stumbling upon their hasty husbands fists, or such like", which is a quip that no doubt might have amused his renaissance readers (and maybe multi-wifed Solomon) but  which most would find deplorable in our thankfully more enlightened times. 

He also mentions that Matthiolus, the Italian 16th. century physician, "teacheth that a water drawn out of the roots, wherewith the women of Italy use to scour their faces from sunne-burning, freckles, morphew, and any such deformities of the skin" which, - who knows? - might yet be revived by the cosmetics industry.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Long-tongued Bumblebee

Solomon's seal flowers produce a lot of nectar, so they are a powerful attraction for bumblebees - even if they do have to hang upside down to reach it. Only the bee species with the longest tongues can reach the nectar - this one (Bombus lucorum?) is just about to leave the flower and its long, curved tongue is still extended.


Here you can just see the extended tongue of the bee through the translucent tubular petal

Monday, May 11, 2009

Solomon’s Seal Fate Sealed










The patch of Solomon’s seal Polygonatum x hybridum in our garden is just coming into flower, looking immaculate after a light shower of rain, but within about a month its leaves will be reduced to skeletons. Yesterday I watched the current generation of Solomon’s seal sawfly Phymatocera aterrima emerge from their pupae in the soil and begin to climb the stems, with the sawflies' wings still not fully expanded. Within five minutes the males had found the females and they were mating. Within fifteen minutes the females were laying eggs in the leaves. Every year the larvae that develop strip away all the leaf tissue but there doesn’t seem to be any fatal long-term consequences for the plants, which has been spreading steadily in the flower border for the last ten years. The top picture is the sawflies'-eye view of the plant arching overhead, as they emerge for another breeding season and the picture below......


 

...... shows their highly destructive larvae at work.