Pharmacopceial Vegetable Drugs 1911
Pharmacopceial Vegetable Drugs 1911
Pharmacopceial Vegetable Drugs 1911
Heretofore unpublished.
$/?
L
Bulletin No.
Pharmacy
1911.
18.
Series,
No.
4.
T N
u
of the
LLOYD LIBRARY
of
MATERIA MEDICA
LLOYD
U. & C. G.
CINCINNATI, OHIO
J.
PHARMACY
SERIES, No.
4.
HISTORY
OF THE
VEGETABLE DRUGS
OF THE
Phar. M.,
With portraits of Charles Rice, Ph. D., New York, N. Y., elected
Chairman of the Pharmacopeial Committee on Revision, who died
May
13,
90 1 (see
portrait),
an d Jos eph
P.
to
law%
ion
INTRODUCTION.
Together with
$"
direction,
be
at their
command
should
increasing cares of business, and notwithstanding the additions that were continually being
made to their libraries, the publication was reluctantly suspended with
June, 1887
With
was hoped)
laid aside,
i<m
botanical
duction, or uses of medicinal plants generally.
But now, when the
literature on the subject is at last passably satisfactory, the authors
comprehend that it is too late for them to hope to resume, much less
complete, a work after the nature and plan of Drugs and Medicines of
North America.
so
is due, not to the cooling of enthusiasm, but to the multiplicity of duties
in other directions, linked with the enervating touch of this writer's
more than threescore years. It is earnestly hoped, however, that the
connected data brought together in the Lloyd Library through so manv
years of earnest effort on the part of its founders, and now donated
to the world of science, may some day be happily utilized in the resumption of this work by persons younger and less burdened by cares.
The
publication led to
many
delightful corre-
spondences with
abroad.
INTRODUCTION.
the foremost pharmacologist of the world. With Daniel Hanbury, he
had just completed the monumental work on European and Oriental
drugs, (including the principal drugs of other parts of the world)
known as the Pharmacographia, and was ambitious to continue, in like
manner, with the medicinal products of North America. In July, 1894,
Professor Fliickiger visited America, where he was the guest of the
renowned American pharmacists, Dr. Edward R. Squibb, of Brooklyn,
and Dr. Frederick Hoffman, of New York City. He had arranged to
visit Cincinnati and consummate here a plan for the detailed study of
the North American pharmacography, but a period of intense heat
then chanced to prevail throughout America, and the aged professor
was forced, reluctantly, to abandon his journey to this city. The writer
then selected and forwarded to Professor Fliickiger, for review, several
cases of books dealing with the early American materia medica, such as
He
designed,
also, to institute a series of original investigations in his laboratory,
at Strassburg University. The Lloyd Library seemed, even then, competent to furnish the historical data sufficient to establish the records
of the plants considered, this writer (John Uri Lloyd) accepting the
responsibility of the history, including the sophistications and descriptions of the parts used in medicine, whilst the botanical history, relationships, and kindred descriptions were to be the care of Mr. Curtis
Gates Lloyd. The publication was thus to partake of the plan of both
Drugs and Medicines of North America, and the Pharmacographia of
Fliickiger and Hanbury, so well known and so thoroughly established.
The work was accordingly commenced, and several historical articles
were prepared by the writer, a few of which were forwarded to Professor Fliickiger. The unfortunate and lamentable death of that worldrenowned pharmacologist, within a very short time after his return
to Europe, terminated the enterprise, bringing to the writer one of the
greatest disappointments of his life.
Of the drug articles thus prepared for Professor Fliickiger, two
were subsequently published in the American Journal of Pharmacy,
one, titled The California Manna* appearing in July, 1897, and the
When
INTRODUCTION.
The Destruction of
other,
897
Tobacco
in
America^
in
November,
Notwithstanding
Whom
Schaer, of Strassburg University, who translated into German the accompanying work by Professor Lloyd on American Manna, for the pages of
the Berichte der Deittschen Pharmaceutischen Gesellschaft.
present herein, with the knowledge and consent of Prof. Schaer and
the author, the original paper on American Manna. Editor Am. Jour. Pharm.
tWhen Prof. Fliickiger visited America (July, 1894), he hoped to obtain historical data that would enable him to give the records of several interesting American productions. In this he failed, and he then associated
After much of the
in his behalf the services of the author of this paper.
work had been done, the death of Professor Fliickiger interrupted the investigation. This paper on Tobacco was one of the subjects considered.
We
Editor
Am.
Jour.
Pharm.
iii
INTRODUCTION.
_
humanity.
This writer, to-day, believes with heartfelt earnestness, that even
the unlettered aborigines of all lands whose products serve civilization,
are entitled to civilization's lasting obligations. The story is a common
one.
Necessity of environment, or accident, led primitive man into
search of nature's secrets.
Observant pioneers, or adventurers,
applied the discoveries of the aborigines to their own domestic uses.
The man of commerce served next his part in the distribution of such
drugs and foods, and finally systematic, professional students further
elaborated these products that, but for the empiricist of the past, pre-
be
known.
before
stated, the pages that follow carry the titles of every
vegetable drug
of the Pharmacopeia of the United States, 1900 Revision. Of
necessity, only enough is chronicled of each drug's
beginning to point to the
peoples or the individuals who introduced them to medicine and
pharmacy, no attempt being made to follow the details of subsequent manipulation.
Brevity in the record is a necessitv. References to the Bibliography appended to the work, indicate that an attempt
at more than
fairly detailed historical credit would have been
impracticable, the aim
being merely to establish the general introduction of
each drug. Nor
is the first link in the chain often seen.
The beginning of the use of
most vegetable remedial agents antedates written history.
As a rule,
the earliest authorities cited herein base their statements
"upon those of
others, the details being now lost in antiquity,
or veiled bv tradition
Many worthy
INTRODUCTION.
Hanbury's
and
Fliickiger
ticular reason for so doing.
unimpeachable
as
accepted
are
works,
similar
and
Pharmacographia,
For example,
The
therefore
has
list
The
volume.
have been made would comprise a
Whoever
important.
most
as
are
such
necessarily been restricted to
the
find
probably
will
mentioned,
herein
wishes to elaborate any subject
others
to
references
carries
rule,
a
as
each,
for
ample,
list suggestively
explorers,
and
travelers
that
observed
be
will
connected therewith. It
countries
in
the
used
medicines
to
refer
as well as historians, often first
Lloyd
the
that
seen
be
will
it
direction
this
In
described by them.
there
completeness,
its
concerns
as
fortunate,
Library is particularly
pamphlets.
of
exclusive
shelves,
its
on
volumes
being at this date 32,434
Librarian
the
especially,
thank,
to
conclusion,
in
The writer wishes,
painstaking
whose
to
Holden,
William
of the Lloyd Library, Captain
seeking
of
and
needed
volumes
procuring
of
care, both in the way
is
he
Bibliography,
the
compiling
as
of
well
references as required, as
much
indebted.
.
.
_
this
in
has,
who
Wycoff,
Edith
Miss
Librarian,
To the Assistant
expresses
writer
the
helpful,
exceedingly
been
as in other directions
his sincerest thanks.
to
are
A.,
M.
Stewart,
Margaret
Miss
secretary,
To the writer's
as
as
well
authors,
Latin
and
Greek
from
be credited the translations
work.
entire
the
throughout
care
helpful
continued
and
Aloes
on
those
(as
included
herein
articles
Several of the
the
by
published
previously
papers
of
condensations
Pomegranate) are
Waldbott,
Sigmund
Dr.
To
Chicago.
Druggist,
Western
writer in the
service
exceptional
of
was
who
Library,
then in charge of the Lloyd
now
indebted
less
feels
no
writer
papers,
the
these
of
in the production
than at the time of their original publication.
Association,
Pharmaceutical
American
the
of
inspiration
For the
for
prepared
was
work
of
the
synopsis
grateful.
the author is very
of
illness
owing
to
but
meeting,
the society at its Richmond (1910)
the undersigned
the
imperfectly
so
expresses
drugs
Pharmacopeial
This Bulletin on
the
lead
evolution,
as
to
in
its
expended
been
has
that
amount of labor
paucity
of
the
because
humiliation
of
degree
a
frankly
author to admit
research.
library
study,
and
time,
of
outlay
an
great
so
of returns for
Cincinnati,
May
19,
".
frvhi.
/Cl/lASfC)
opy of the
ted
i>oo
>
article of
commerce
Gum
fore Christ, described it, as also did Dioscorides (194) and Pliny (514)
under the name "Egyptian Gum/' It has been employed in the arts
from all time and in domestic medicine and commerce, as well as by
the Arabian physicians and those of the renowned school of Salerno.
During the Middle Ages it was obtained from Egypt and Turkey, being an article of commerce in the bazaars of Constantinople, A. D.
as
Venice,
from
Europe
through
distributed
was
The
drug
1340.
Among the most interesting and instructive
early as A. D. 1521.
recent contributions to the subject are the reports of the Wellcome
ACONITUM
Aconite, Aconitum napellus, was familiar to the ancients as a
poisonous plant, and was used by the ancient Chinese as well as by
In a work published for the Welsh MSS.
the hill tribes of India.
My
Society
was designated as a plant that every physician should grow.* In
pracmedical
drug
to
the
introduced
Vienna,
of
Stork
(617),
1763,
tice, from which date it crept into the practice of the dominant school.
Aconite has ever been a Homeopathic favorite.
ALOE
(ALOE SUCCOTRINA.)
aloe comprises a large family of succulent-leaved
Most of the species have showy
plants native to tropical countries.
The genus
* Physicians of
Myddvai.
of
who
died
1233.
made a
Aloe succotrina
cultivated in hot-houses.
"grows in the Indies, and especially in the Island of Soccotera"
(Lam.), but has long been cultivated in England. It is a shrub five
or six feet high, with a stem marked with the scars of the fallen
leaves.
The stem is at first simple, but when the plant is old the stem
is usually divided.
At the top of each branch is borne a large cluster
of thick, crowded, fleshy leaves.
Each leaf is one and one-half to two
feet long, rounded beneath, flattened on the upper side, the margins
being each a row of white spines. The flowers are in a large terminal
spike-like raceme, proceeding from the center of the leaf cluster.
The flowers are orange-red, nodding, cylindrical, each borne on a short
peduncle, slightly exserted. The pistil has a three-celled, many seeded
ovary and a long simple style.
The earliest history of the aloe plant is somewhat obscured by
the fact that the name aloe, for example as it occurs in the Bible, relates to a substance entirely different from the inspissated juice of the
various species of the modern aloe plant. The aloe of the Bible is
the wood of aquilaria agallocha (Roxburgh) or lignaloes, which was
used among the ancient nations as an incense, and was held in high
esteem on account of its scarcity. With modern cathartic aloes it has
nothing in common except the bitterness.
The aloe plant is considered by modern writers to have grown
wild in India from a very remote period. It was most likely introduced into that country by the Arabs, who probably were the distributors of knowledge concerning the medicinal virtues of aloes.
This
flowers
and
are
of a
of a rosin-
It is yet all
Grooved
3
From Cape
Peter Van Wett
ALTHAEA
(Alth
scribed by Dioscorides (194) under the Greek name signifying to heal
It has been used in domestic medicine from the earliest periods.
Charlemagne (A. D. 724-814), over a thousand years ago, demanded that
it be cultivated in his domain.
It grows throughout Europe, Asia
Minor, western and northern Asia and adjacent districts, being employed more or less in domestic medication in all localities. Its domestic use introduced this demulcent drug to early "professional"
medication.
AMYGDALA AMARA
The seeds of Bitter Almonds (Primus amygdalus, var. amara),
known to be poisonous in the days of antiquity, were yet used medicinally throughout the Middle Ages. Valerius
Cordus (169) employed
them as an ingredient of trochisci. They are referred to by Scribonius
Largus (589) in the century preceding Christ. Their poisonous
qualities were shown to depend on hydrocyanic acid bv Bohm
of Berlin
at the beginning of the last century.
Bitter almonds' have never been
a favorite in domestic medicine, although as stated, used in
that direction.
They have been scarcely more a favorite in licensed medication.
AMYGDALA DULCIS
The Almond, Prunus amygdalus,
var. dulcis,
is
ANISUM
This drug, Pimpinella anisum, is among the oldest known medicines and spices.
Theophrastus (633) and later writers, such as DiosCharlecorides (194), Pliny (514), and Edrisi (221), mention it.
magne commanded that it be cultivated on the imperial farms in Germany. Its ancient source was the island of Crete, and Egypt. It was
one of the drugs enumerated by Edward I (1305), to be taxed when
carried across the Bridge of London.
Anise is mentioned in the expenses of King John of France (A. D. 1319-1364) during his abode
in England.
The Grocers' Company of London had its oversight
(1453). The Royal Wardrobe of Edward IV (A. D. 1480) was perfumed thereby. It was used in England as a pot herb prior to 1542,
and during "the reign of Charlemagne it was enormously taxed.
Throughout all this period anise was employed both as a spice and as
a domestic medicine.
ANTHEMIS
Anthemis
APOCYNUM
American "Indian Hemp," Apocynum cannabinum,
the name
criven to various species and varieties of this plant, in contradistinction
The root of apoc10 the true Indan hemp of India, Cannabis indica.
ynum has been used in decoction as an active hydragogue cathartic, and
also as a diuretic, in domestic medicine, since the days of the earliest
settlers, who learned of its qualities from the Indians.
Thus introduced into medication, it came to the attention of the profession. As
a remedy in "dropsy" apocynum has been extensively used in home
medication, and thus became known to physicians of American educaFinally it was introduced to the pages of the Pharmacopeia.
tion.
5
is
The
ARNICA
All parts of this plant, (Arnica montana,) were popular remedies
The early botanists, such as Matin Germany at a very early period.
thiolus (414), Gesner (264), and Clusius (153) had a knowledge of
Franz Joel
its medicinal qualities, as used by the common people.
(341), of Greifswald, Germany, expressly recommended it in the sixDuring i678-'79 arnica experienced an enthusiastic
teenth century.
crusade as a "new remedy"' in the cure of fevers, the hope being to supplant Peruvian bark by this domestic drug.
Collin (162), of Vienna,
reported a thousand patients in the Pazman Hospital cured of intermittents by the flowers, whilst other physicians were scarcely less enthusiastic.
The herb was thus recognized in the London Pharmacopeia
(1788) but fell into disuse, regaining in later years a position as an application in the form of a tincture for bruises, sprains, etc., in this direction being now commended in modern medical and domestic literature.
ASAFCETIDA
Under
the
(Ferula foetida), has from all time been used in India and
Persia, and thence long exported, a duty being levied thereon at the
fcetida,
ASPIDIUM
The
livres
by Louis
XIV
for a tape-
worm
BALSAMUM PERUVIANUM
This drug, obtained from the Toluifera pereirae, came to the attention of the earlier Spanish explorers in South America as a substance commonly employed by the natives as a remedy for wounds.
It
constituted a part of the tribute paid by the natives to the Indian chiefs
of Cuscatlan, to whom it was presented in curiously ornamented earthen
On its first importation into Europe it brought enormous
jars.*
prices, as much as $45 an ounce, and in Rome 100 ducats, or over $200
permitted the Bishop of the Indies to substian ounce. Pope Pius
tute this Balsam of Guatemala for that of Egypt in the preparation
of the chrism used in the Catholic churches. Various early descriptions of travelers refer to it more or less enthusiastically, between the
conquest of Guatemala (A. D. 1524), and 1628, at which date Hernandez (314) described the tree. From the domestic use of the drug it
crept into German pharmacy in the beginning of the seventeenth century.
In consequence of the fact that the exports of Guatemala came
through the port of Lima, Peru, the misleading name of "Peruvian
Balsam" was in the early days affixed to it, paralleling somewhat the
record of Mocha coffee, which is not grown in Mocha or even thereabout, but was exported therefrom in the early days of Arabian coffee.
*This reminds us of the curious jars in which we observed Mastich sold on the island of
Scio by the collectors. These jars, holding a few ounces of the purest and clearest tears, have
been thus an article of local commerce since before the Moslem rule.
The
plant
Atropa belladonna
native to Southern Europe, extending thence to the Crimea, Caucasia, and the northern parts of Asia
Minor. About 1504 a book appeared in Paris titled the Grand Herbier,
which carried the first authentic notice of belladonna, although the
term "solatrum furiale,'" used by Saladinus of Ascoli
(570), about
1450, is presumed to refer to it.
Its effects, internallv, were subjects of
treatises by Amoreaux (20a), Paris,
1760; Daries (184), Leipsic,
1770; Munch (453), Gottmgen, 1783 and 1785, and subsequently by
all who wrote comprehensively on medicine.
In toxicology the Ger-
man
is
botanist,
Mr
I^ ta&W^lM^SS^
iB ASia
Min r
'
Scammony
New
the
making
of plasters.
BENZOINUM
Benzoinum (from Styrax benzoin), curiously enough escaped the
attention of the Greeks and Romans, nor, so far as is known, did those
tradesmen of the tenth to the thirteenth centuries, the
Arabians and Persians, carry it to China.
Ibn Batuta (333a)
1325-49, mentions "J ava frankincense/' which under the Arabian
name became corrupted into Banjawi, Benjni, Benziti, Benzo'e, Benzoin,
and finally even Benjamin. After a hundred years the sultan of Egypt,
Melech Elmaydi, sent it to the doge of Venice among other presents,
and in 1490 a second doge of Venice was presented with a larger
amount by the same sultan of Egypt. Considered still a precious balsam, in 1476 Caterina Cornaro, queen of Cyprus, received from Egypt
Thence travelers in Siam and the Malabar
15 pounds of "Benzui."
Coast, Venetian tradesmen, and others, gave it due consideration, during and after which time it became regularly imported into Europe.
Being submitted to dry distillation in rude paper cones over a pan, the
condensed distillate, or flowers, under the name of Flores Benzoes, in
the 17th century, gave origin to the now familiar Benzoic Acid. Thus
from the empiricism of the past this grateful flavoring agent and preservative was introduced to the medicine and pharmacy of to-day.
energetic
BERBERIS
The
officially
BUCHU
The Hottentots of the Cape of Good Hope used the leaves of the
Buchu plant (Barosma betulina) as a domestic remedy, and from
them the colonists of the Cape of Good Hope derived their information
concerning it. Reece (540) and Company, London, 1821, first imported it and introduced it to pharmacy and to the medical profession,
where, as well as in private formulae and domestic practice, it has ever
Perhaps no "patent" American
since enjoyed more or less notoriety.
medicine has ever enjoyed greater notoriety than, about i860, did the
decoction of the leaves under the term "Helmbold's Buchu," which,
a weak alcoholic decoction, commanded one dollar for a six-ounce vial,
and sold in car-load lots. During the crusade of this preparation the
medical profession of America, probably inspired by the press comments, prescribed buchu very freely. It is still in demand and is still
favored as a constituent of remedies recommended to the laity.
CALAMUS
The use
of Calamus,
Acorus calamus,
in the
domestic medication
ket."
past.
CALENDULA
Marigold, Calendula officinalis, has been known, practically, from
the beginning of documentary records in scientific or medicinal lines.
10
it is
In early days of
was employed in decoctions for fevers,
herbals, as also in
treatises
on European
JATEORHIZA CALUMBA*
Persons familiar with our common yellow parilla, Menispermum
canadense, have a good idea of the plant that yields the calumba root
of commerce. Indeed, a casual observer would take an illustration of
one for the other, so closely do they resemble each other in shape of
leaf, stem, and general floral appearance.
One author, Roxburgh
(559) (Flora Ind., Vol. 3, p. 807) has placed the plant in the genus
menispermum. The genus jateorhiza as now constituted consists of
three species, all natives of tropical Africa. It belongs to the natural
order menispermaceae. The plant which produces the Colombo root of
commerce is a herbaceous vine climbing over trees in the forests of
eastern tropical Africa in the territory of Mozambique and Quilimani.
The leaves are alternate, petiolate, cordate, and palmately lobed. As
previously stated, they look very much like the leaves of our common
yellow parilla. The flowers are dioecious and borne in pendulous axillary panicles. The female flowers have six sepals, six petals, six abortive stamens, and three pistils.
The male flowers have the same floral
envelopes and six perfect stamens. The anthers, as in yellow parilla,
are four-celled, a structure comparatively rare save in this natural
order. The plants that produce the root of commerce vary much in
the shape of the leaves and in the amount of hispidity in the stem,
and were formerly considered as belonging to two species, Jateorhiza
calumba and Jateorhiza palmata, but later botanists have united them
under the former name.
Calumba (also columbo) root has long been in use under the name
"kalumb" among the African tribes of Mozambique, who employed
it as a remedy for dysentery and other diseases (Berry)
(63). Undoubtedly the drug was brought by them to the immediate knowledge
of the Portuguese when they obtained possession of that country in
Through the
II
definite
695
Naturae,
with
radix indica, rays columba. He also introduced illustrations of crystals observed in the study of this drug. Contemporaneously with this physicist, J. C. Semmedus (592) (probably
in 1689 or shortly before) mentions calumba in his writings as occurring among drugs originating from India. This author's work has
become more prominent in a later edition (1722).
Valmont-Bomare (656c) in the 1764 edition of his dictionary describes "calumbe" as the root of an unknown tree brought to us from
India.
He adds that in Bengal this root is considered a specific in
and
mort-du-ehien,
which is the old French name for colchicum.
Not, however, until in close succession the treatises on calumba
root by Gaubius (257a), 1771, Cartheuser (129), 1773, and Percival (499), 1773, appeared, was there much general distribution of
knowledge concerning this drug. In this connection it is perhaps of
interest to note that in a previous translation (dated
1755) of Cartheuser's Materia Medica calumba root is not to be found.
Through Percival's recommendation especially the drug rapidly
gained entrance into European materia medicas, and since about 1776
we find a record of it in many of the pharmacopoeias of European
countries. However, the geographical and botanical origin of calumba
root as yet remained a mystery. The Portuguese, as already stated,
having had a monopoly of the trade in this article, seemed to have
been careful not to disclose the origin of the drug and made it a custom
to carry it to India and then to export it to Europe from Indian instead of African ports. Hence, for a long time the general impression
prevailed that the plant was a native of India and that the capital of
this root,
which he
calls
later
still
unknown.
In 1825 Captain
W.
F.
Owen
observed
W. J. Hooker
in 1830 was enabled to describe the whole plant, both male and female,
under the name of Cocculus palmatus, Hooker.
The name of the genus jateorhiza was finally created in 1849 by
Miers. (Hooker, Niger Flora, p. 212.) Chasmanthera columba is another synonym for this plant proposed by Baillon (33).
(Nat. Hist,
of Plants, Vol. III., London, 1874.)
CAMBOGIA
Cambogia (Garcinia hanburii) is a production of a Siamese tree
from Camboja, from whence it derived its name. Chinese travelers
oyer a thousand years ago mentioned it, describing the method of obtaining it by an incision in the stem of the tree, whilst the Chinese
herbal "Pun tsao" includes it in its pages, the drug being regarded
by the Chinese as poisonous, its use being chiefly as a pigment. Clusius
053) described (1605) a specimen of gamboge brought from China
in 1603, after which it drifted into European medicine as a purgative.
It was one of the articles of commerce of the East India Company,
and was recognized pharmaceutical^ in the shops of the city of Frankfort as early as 1612.
The date of the introduction of gamboge into
Chinese art and medicine is beyond the records of established history.
CAMPHORA
Camphor (from Cinnamomum camphora) has been made in
China since the earliest record. Marco Polo (518), who visited that
country in the thirteenth century, saw many of the trees producing it.
It was known to the Chinese writers of the sixth century,
as well
as were its qualities as a valuable timber.
The earliest mention of
Ian
guage
as a rare
ambe
treasures of the Sassanian dynasty of the kings of Persia.
Notwithreach
CANNABIS INDICA
This drug (Cannabis sativa) is one of the Oriental products, the
beginning of whose use is lost in antiquity. Its name threads the literature of Arabia and India, hashish (or bhang) being continually men13
(Burton
edition, vol. vii, p. 76. History of Gharib and His Brother.)
Imported
into Europe preceding 1690, it passed into disuse
until Naooleon's
Egypt (1809
and Bouger.
83839) the experiments of O'Shaughnessy in Calcutta (484) since which
date cannabis and its resin have received a place in
most pharmacopeias.
From the beginning of East Indian history hemp has been
smoked as a narcotic intoxicant, and when surreptitiously
added to
sweetmeats and foods, has in Oriental life been employed
as a narcotic
with the utmost recklessness. This is shown in
the exaggerations of
^Arabian Rights which portrays so many life habits of those times.
This writer found hashish of several qualities in
the bazaars of Asia
Minor and in Constantinople, one specimen "extra fine
hashish" costing in a Constantinople bazaar over two
dollars an ounce
,
CANTHARIS (CANTHARIDES)
Spanish Flies (Cantharis vesicatoria)
This once popular reme
dial agent has lost its position in
modern medication. Its use came
hand in hand with mediaeval medical cruelty,
and was an heirloom of
ancient heroic medication. Hippocrates
(B. C. 375-400) valued candr PS "^ a
in ameno
and
itgJes
without
ques\
7
tionlhl"! K
Ce
he k
itS aCti n WOuld once ^ve
been
*?
f and professional
popular in both domestic
American medication
Its
use in erysipelas and as a plaster, and
to "draw the nervous energy
and the circulating fluid" to the surface,
and "thus again relieve irS
tation and inflammation of internal
parts," are relics of quite recent
American medical authority, all writers in
good reputation (Regular)
h
ly
g
Cantharis
.
^a,
ooultnW?
tavor
favTlfto
as to
mak et
make
it a
*!?"?""' """T*'
novelty for a cantharis
^Tuifltirrw*
SCh
and
t0
l
?
- -TdYsto be prescribed
P
-el noTnglr
is
plaster
^ nore
its
CAPSICUM
h^Ibeing m
its
home
?ountnV^f
ofXerica was used
14
tZ
in the
CARUM
(C
it was
Asia,
and
Europe
parts
of
midland
and
been in the northern
Enginto
introduced
was
date
early
an
at
and
Arabians,
known to the
centhirteenth
and
twelfth
of
the
medicine
domestic
land. In German
for
name
popular
the
still
is
which
occurs,
cumich
turies the word
century
fourteenth
of
the
close
At
the
Germany.
Southern
in
caraway
in
employed
largely
was
it
where
England,
in
used
much
carawav was
medicine,
or
in
cooking
in
either
India
in
used
cooking. It was not
spices.
Indian
among
days
early
the
of
record
in
the
appear
nor does it
use.
every
its
dominates
that
reach
domestic
a
has
It
CARYOPHYLLUS
(Eugenia
early
date.
an
since
commerce
Indian
of
article
an
been
matica) have
D.
A.
to
266
dynasty,
B.
C.
Han
the
of
writers
Known to the Chinese
after
century,
fourth
the
about
Europe
in
known
became
220, cloves
for
although,
commerce,
article
of
an
increasingly
which they became
the
clove,
the
of
home
original
The
expensive.
very
time,
a long
aroThe
all.
cloves
at
no
produce
now
Islands,
Clove
Moluccas or
were
and
they
favorite,
great
them
a
of
made
cloves
matic nature of
as
well
food,
as
flavor
and
to
breath
the
perfume
to
used
therefore
The
cordials.
stomachic
as
such
medicines,
domestic
in
being employed
with
spiced
largely
is
Kentucky
of
Cordial
Blackberrv
well-known
the
ripe
of
the
juice
being
part
blackberry
'its
cinnamon,
cloves and
this
use
of
domestic
The
whisky.
being
part
alcoholic
berries, its
Pharmacopeia
CASSIA FISTULA
Galen (254a) mentions a cheap cassia called "fistula," seemingly
referring, not to this drug, but to a coarse cinnamon, rolled up as a
The fruit now known as Cassia fistula was noticed by Joannes
tube.
Actuarius
minutely describes
it.
The drug
is
15
century
also mentioned by writers of the
CHIMAPHILA
Wintergreen, or pipsissewa, Chimaphila umbellata, is a creeping
evergreen vine native to northern latitudes of Europe and Asia, and
found in the United States in shady woods, where it prefers loose,
sandy soil. The Indians of North America considered chimaphila of
importance, using decoctions of it in nephritic, scrofulous, and rheumatic disorders.
Mitchell (441), in his Inaugural Address, 1803,
(University of Pennsylvania) gave the drug particular attention, whilst
in domestic medicine it was in favor as a tea, in the sections of country
in which it was native, its use being especially in rheumatic and nephritic affections. In these directions it crept into some favor with the
medical profession, and thus anticipated the uses of salicylic acid and
the salicylates, which in structural form are constituents of this plant.
CHIRATA
An
Pharmacopeia
in 1839.
t8^
was
,l~
a.u^ t*j
Eclinbur
i.
first
and
CHONDRUS
Moss, Chondrus
USe
bemg
E
"?i
5.
Bntish Pharmacopeia
.
never gave
The London
or
form.
CHRYSAROBINUM
This substance, formerly supposed to be
identical with crude chrysophamc acid, is derived from Goa Powder, a deposit
found in the
cavities of the trunk of the Andira
araroba, a South American tree. It
1Sease in the same manner as the c de
Goa powder,
^
^
W
1S S1
a seP arated material. Goa powder was emP
y
i^Li
J
ployed
native medication as a remedy in skin
diseases, which brought
it to the attention of
physicians and led to its introduction into medicine, as well as its final insertion
in the Pharmacopeia
S
m
L ?
-
16
actsea
pheriana.
name
the
80
(605), 1812; Bigelow (69)
Ewell (230), 1827; Rafinesque (535), 1828; and Tonga and Durand's
(222) addition to Edwards' and Vavasseur's Materia Medica, 1829.
None of these authorities, however, added anything not given by the
Indian, so far as the field of action of the drug is concerned, excepting
perhaps the statement of Howard (329), 1832, who was an enthusiast
in favor of macrotys in the treatment of smallpox, a claim supported
forty years after by Dr. G. H. Norris, 1872, in a paper read before the
Alabama State Medical Association. He reported that during an epidemic of smallpox in Huntsville, Ala., families using macrotys as a
tea were absolutely free from smallpox, and that in those same families
vaccination had no effect whatever, so long as the use of macrotvs was
continued, f See Llovd Brothers' Drue- Treatise No. XTTT Macroty
CINCHONA
Tradition states that the medicinal qualities of cinchona (Cinchona
calisaya) were known to the aborigines of South America from the
earliest times.
Arrot (Philosophical Transactions, xl, 1737-8, p. 48)
states that the qualities and uses of the bark of cinchona were known
to the Indians before the days of the Spanish conquest.
Others declare that the Peruvians distrusted the drug, considering it dangerous
Markham (406) asserting that the native doctors did not employ it.
Preceding 1739, a Jesuit missionary, however, was cured of fever by
the bark, administered to him by an Indian a like incident being recorded concerning the Spanish corregidor of Loxa, in 1630. In 1638,
the wife of the Viceroy of Peru, the fourth Count of Chinchon, being
attacked by a fever, was cured with the powdered bark, which being
commended by her, gave to it the name, "The Countess' Powder/' or
;
17
too
to record, followed the inroads of this once rankly empirical drug,
which, however, was possessed of qualities sufficient to establish it
finally in the favor of "regular medication/'
It was introduced into
England about 1656, commanding then a price many times above that
of opium.
CINNAMOMUM
CASSIA
made
2w
^W
is
'
'
views.
18
w6rk of
title
Peru,
Oh, mighty lord, son of the Sun and of the Incas, thy fathers, thou who
knoweth of the bounties which have been granted thy people, let me recall the
blessings of the divine Coca which thy privileged subjects are permitted to enjoy
through thy progenitors, the sun, the moon, the earth, and the boundless hills.
A plant
In this connection the following quotation will indicate how distasteful are the methods of the natives, even yet, to those whose first
duty consists in suppressing such ceremonies as are therein described:
When
the period for departure (on a dangerous journey. L.) actually arrives, the Indians throw Coca in the air, just as did the Incan priests of old,
to propitiate the gods of the mountains, who, presumably, do not wish their domains invaded.
The
It
may
from the
satisfied,
be gathered
and work
all
Notwithstanding all this, fortified by repeated experiences of travelers, the world of scientific medicine ignored, or even ridiculed, the
drug, until its emphatic introduction in the latter part of the last century (about 1870, in England), forced those concerned in authoritative
medicine to give it some recognition. Numerous experimentations on
its composition had been made by Dr. Weddell. in 1850 (671), and
others, succeeding as well as preceding that date, who tried vainly to
discover an energetic constituent of the drug. It was at first believed
that the leaves owed their inherent qualities (if they had any, which
was questioned) to some volatile principle, a supposition that proved a
fallacy, other than in the discovery of the volatile base named by them
hydrine, which did not at all represent coca and which is no longer
mentioned. However, the persistent reports concerning the use of coca
19
and
its
Woehler
But notwithstanding the identification, half a century ago, of its
now well-known alkaloid, coca was long thereafter "authoritatively"
considered as inert, or simply a mild stimulant, like tea. Its alleged
properties were deemed legendary and imaginary, its alkaloid similar
to caffeine, both in constitution and qualities. This view prevailed until
Koller, in 1884, confounded the professional world, as well as that of
science, by announcing thte marvelous qualities of cocaine as a local
anesthetic.
In this connection we may further anticipate by saying
that previous investigators of coca had already employed the physiological method of injecting the alkaloid cocaine into the veins of the
lower animals, as well as the utilization of other scientific methods of
determining its value, such "authoritative" investigations being accepted
as conclusive evidence of the fact that coca, other than as a mild stimulant, like tea or coffee, was worthless and inert, and that its alkaloid,
cocaine, was similar in effect to caffeine. Physicians using coca were
thus becoming subjects of ridicule, as being incapable of judging a
remedy's qualities pharmacists making preparations of the drug were
tinctured with the odium of being concerned in a fraud, while the natives who employed it in their daily life, as well as travelers impressed
ignorance and imbued witr.
superstitious imaginings.
is were thrust such men as
Weddell, Spruce. Markham
and others, scientists and travelers, who spoke from personal observation or experience. Although other pessimists contributed in the same
direction, the most authoritative investigations to discredit coca appeared in the London Lancet, 1876 (196a), and in the Edinburgh
Medical Journal, Vol. XIX, 1873 (55b), which may be summarized
as follows
;
G F
Dowdeswell
B A
>
->
When we
that
compare
this coca
20
.,...
The
skin
it has caused neither
of
the
state
nor
the
pupil
affected
the
not
has
It
drowsiness nor sleeplessness; assuredly it has occasioned none of those subthe
others
not
it
by
to
abscribed
and
described
fervidly
jective effects so
which
exhilaration
and
buoyancy
of
feeling
the
even
nor
excitement,
slightest
water. This examinais experienced from mountain air, or a draught of spring
and
important
prove
would
drug
the
that
expectation
in
the
tion was commenced
This
agent.
therapeutical
a
as
valuable
perhaps
and
physiologically,
interesting
it is positively inert,
that
asserting
Without
disappointed.
been
has
expectation
preclude
to
slight
as
is
so
action
that
its
experiments
these
it is concluded from
and
it is the
popularly
or
therapeutically
either
value
any
having
the idea of its
pulse,
etc., of tea,
the
effect
on
the
upon
observation
from
writer,
the
belief of
may,
things
such
that
cold,
and
tepid,
hot,
water,
plain
even
milk-and-water, and
large
than
even
effect
decided
more
a
produce
temperatures,
at slightly different
doses of Coca, if taken at about the temperature of the body.
:
in
authorities,
eminent
these
of
investigations
The result of the
cocaine,
demonwth
experimentations
physiological
the
with
connection
the
professions
and
science
of
world
the
of
satisfaction
strated to the
in
something
the
line
of
merely
a
best,
very
the
at
was,
this
drug
that
next,
coffee,
and,
that
and
tea
as
such
stimulants,
the caffeine-bearing
possessing
any
inherent
of
or
whatever,
value
any
instead of being of
quality whatever,
it
was
it
its
that
it
To
may
rifice
Almost every purchase (of the crude drug.-L.) has been made
on mental
protest, and he (Squibb) has been ashamed of every
pound of the fluid extract
sent out, from the knowledge that it was of poor
quality and there seems to
be no more prospect of a supply of a better quality than
there was this time last
year because so long as an inferior quality sells in
such enormous quantities at
good prices, the demands of trade are satisfied
;
2
use
ft
it,
ndi ion of
e markets, the writer has finally decided to give
fl
l
kl
fl >d extract of Coca,
and has left it off his list; adopting a fluid
"ff
St ad
a SUpen r substitute f r those who may choose to
il
and regrets that
this course was not taken a year ago.
JS^T
"P
th
In
'^
>
3^V"
tn
ff averages
*&
*'
^"^
"
eq Uahty
u
22
ible,
either side
anything like so thorough, so extended or so accurate as those of Mr. DowIndeed, no other account has been met with, wherein the modern
deswell.
methods of precision have been applied to the question at all; the other testimony being all rather loose and indefinite, often at second or third hands, or
from the narratives of more or less enthusiastic travelers. But if Mr. Dowdesweirs results be accepted as being conclusive, the annual consumption of
40,000,000 pounds of Coca, at a cost of $10,000,000, promotes this substance to
take rank among the large economic blunders of the age.
Now
came
anesthetic.
Dr. Noyes was immediately given a setting, or reference was made thereto, in every pharmaceutical and medical journal
Such an authority as Dr. D. Agnew, of Philadelphia,
of America.
wrote as follows in the Medical Record, October 18, 1884:
This
We
letter of
18,
mable value.
also leading editorials in the various publications on medicine
and pharmacy, of which that from the pen of the then editor of the
Druggists' Circular, Mr. Henry B. Parsons, brother of the present
as
folFrom
it
we
quote
typical.
is
Druggist,
Practical
the
editor of
Came
lows
For
:
the past
sustained.
It seems to
of
a
few
to
the
eye
application
cases,
the
of
majority
the
in
that,
proved
be
drops of a 2 or 4 per cent solution of this salt will produce a more or less compupil.
of
the
Operenlargement
with
pain,
to
insensibility
transient,
plete, but
ations upon the conjunctiva and cornea ordinarily requiring the use of chloroform or ether have been performed upon patients conscious of everything
being done, but saved from pain by the application of a weak aqueous solution
cataract,
patients
the
of
hard
removal
for
operations
several
In
salt.
of this
complained of no pain whatever, the entire conjunctival surface being insenThe only sensation
sible to repeated pinchings with the surgeon's forceps.
time
returns
the
eye
After
a
hardness."
and
"numbness
of
was
that
described
to its normal sensitiveness, and there seems to be no troublesome local aftereffects.
Let
it
even a theoretical
Turning
possibility.
23
Dr. Squibb
now threw
new
into a
investigation of
coca and its alkaloid, his process of manufacture being yet a standard,
and his writings on cocaine being yet authority. These need but be
referred to as occupying many pages in the Ephetneris, 1884-5. They
stand as a lasting memorial to the man who took pleasure in publicly
correcting an error, and whose record in American pharmacy is monumental.
The discovery
who
when
written.
Let us
now do
translation
Eulogy
of
of Plants,*
Coca
783-838.
the'^ewilfoi^WnrlHr
^
w
rId s
j
A",-
of bolh
lus a Sontt
London, 1678T-S
horary.
24
the translation
is
in
The
shrub coca bears a creamy white flower, and a berry somewhat like a small cranOf this Cowley was evidently
berry, red when immature, but darkening to nearly black.
unaware. S.
25
DRUGS.
VEGETABLE
PHARMACOPCEIAL
COCCUS
and
Mexico
native
to
is
cacti,
Pseudococcus
The
These
cactus.
of
species
certain
on
feeds
it
tropical America, where
are
they
where
Islands,
Canary
the
into
imported
thence
insects were
cochineal insect,
counother
and
Indies
West
the
in
well
as
numbers,
as
raised in large
far
so
who,
Mexicans,
the
profit
to
great
of
They are sources
tries.
imparting
quality
of
their
with
acquainted
been
always
have
as known,
as
(and
purpose
which
for
pastry,
and
confectionery
a red color to
domestic
In
employed.
chiefly
still
are
they
carmine)
of
source
the
neuralgic
and
cough
whooping
in
commended
been
have
they
medicine
affections, but have never been seriously considered by the medical profession.
COLOCYNTHIS
The colocynth
from the
west coast of Northern Africa (Senegambia, Morocco, and the Cape
Verde Islands), eastward through the Sahara, Egypt, Arabia, Persia,
Beluchistan, and through India, as far as the Coromandel Coast and
Ceylon, touching northward the Mediterranean and Caspian Seas. At
the Red Sea, near Kosseir, it occurs in immense quantities (239-240).
It is also found here and there in Southern European countries, e.
g.,
Spain and the islands of the Grecian archipelago. Isloated specimens
occur in the Cape of Good Hope, Japan, Sicily (57), and it is suggested
that birds of passage have much to do with the distribution of the seed.
Even from our hemisphere we have recent reports of its successful cultivation on a small scale.
In the island of Cyprus the raising of colocynth has been a source
of revenue since the fourteenth century, and it still forms
an article of
export at the present time.
Colocynth, as already stated,
Hooker and Ball (323a) met with
26
is
it
characteristic
in the oasis of
desert
plant.
Sheshuaua
in
The
used in
clothing from moths;
fruit is
we
July
Jaffa
It is then molded into irregular small balls, packed in boxes and exported, mostly via England. The average annual shipments are stated
in the consular reports to be ten thousand pounds, but these must
have fallen off considerably during recent years. The reason for
ex
report suggests that probably colocynth may be
profitably cultivated in certain parts of the United States.
In this connection we may point to Prof. L. E. Sayre's paper (Am.
Journ. Pharm., 1894,
Montreal as reported in 1805
port tax.
The
(Montreal Pharm. J
Mogador
elsewhere (501).
CONIUM
native to Asia Minor and the islands of the
Mediterranean. It has been naturalized in North and South America
and throughout England and other similar locations. It was known to
the Greeks, who are said to have used it to execute criminals. It was
Conium maculatum
is
long
known under
the
name
27
CONVALLARIA
Lily of the Valley, Convallaria majalis, is recorded as one of the
earliest of domestic remedies, being accepted by Dr. Squibb (610a)
as "continuously used in medicine for several hundred years (Ephe-
Medical
January
Combook
of
that
in
a
states
Rome,
Drummond,
of
Dr.
Edward
1883,
mentaries on the Materia Medica of Dioscorides, Venice, 1621, Dr.
Pietro Andrea Matthioli (414) speaks as follows of its use in cardiac
diseases
of the valley to strengthen the heart, the brain, and
the spiritual parts, and also give it in palpitation, vertigo, epilepsy, and apo-
lily
plexy, etc.
This article led Dr. Squibb, in connection with some private information in a letter from "a very careful and close observer" (Squibb),
to favor the drug as a hopeful remedy that in specific and restricted
directions would be better employed than digitalis. To such an extent
was he impressed in its favor as to lead him to write (1879)
:
it
in the forth-
The commendations
NEW
28
cop el.
year
the
of
publication
a
from
The
(651a),
Tristaon
Manoel
probably
monk,
Portuguese
wherein
a
1625,
and
Brazil
on
chapter
extensive
an
contributes
Bahia
of the convent of
of
description
the
following
immediately
its products.
On page 1308,
wounds.
For
"Cupayba.
says:
he
tree)
balsam
Peru
Cabneriba (or
it hath
big;
and
straite
high,
very
commonly
tree,
Cuypaba is a fig
where
middest,
in
the
tree
the
they
cut
it
get
much oile, within for to
that
abundance
great
oil
in
so
this
hath
it
there
and
it hath the vent,
is very clear
it
more
and
oile
of
quarterne
yield
a
some of them doe
away
taketh
and
wounds,
for
by
set
much
of the color of oile it is
beasts
the
well
burne
and
lights
for
also
serveth
It
all the skarre.
thereat.
themselves
rubbe
and
come
doe
thereof
knowing the vertue
nothing."
for
good
is
wood
the
store,
great
There are
trees
the
of
one
of
illustration
and
description
The first explicit
Marcand
Piso
of
work
joint
the
in
found
yielding copaiba is to be
subsequent
of
the
basis
the
form
statements
grav (511) (1648), whose
remarkrather
appears
it
connection
this
In
subject.
literature on the
anwhich
edition,
sixth
Amstelodamensis,
able that the Pharmacopoeia
mentions
distinctly
year
the
1630,
of
being
tedates this publication,
Marcgrav
and
Piso
of
statements
the
of
Some
Balsam copae yvae.
described
and
figured
Piso
that
fact
the
have given rise to discussion
only
bear
known
to
now
are
they
whereas
the flowers with five sepals,
and
defigured
is
however,
pod,
The
points.
four, being one of the
edible
an
contains
it
that
made
is
statement
scribed correctly, and the
reeating.
As
of
fond
very
are
forest
the
nut which the m'onkevs of
incision
an
that
relates
Piso
balsam,
the
gards the mode of collecting
;
f^^^^J^
^^^^^^SlA "
Particularly
mistake,
the
took
up
Trimen
books.
Even Bentley and
journal,
Pharmaceutical
the
ago
in
long
out
pointed
The mistake was
dorfii is wrong.
ed., p. 228, foot(see
2d
Pharmacographia
in
IX-(18797. 773, and also by Flueckiger
n e)
\ Some
of the
authors
who happened
^^TT^rS^r^
TS&tfASA V^Sfe WodgggJ.
sLsrarrSs.S
Th y
zfzLtfr in
Dia
botanical
hSmett
v on
F,antarum
r he returned to Germany
x8
In
3
cLrge
Ster wnicVhe
account^ ot Krusen
an
wrote
He
;
and died at Freiburg in the Breisgau
urn die Welt,
Reise
einer
auf
"Bemerkungen
stern's expedition, under the title,
Frankfurt o. M., 1812.
"d'affaires in Brazil.
on June 29, 1852.
29
for the delay. The fact that the resiniferous ducts in these trees often attain a diameter of one inch, as
has been observed more "recently by Karsten, seems to be quite
the yield
in
sufficient to
is
make up
balsam accumulates
yield.
It is
in these ducts
and
exerts pressure enough upon the enclosing wall to burst the tree with
a loud report. According to Piso, the copaiba tree is not very frequent
in the Province of Pernambuco, but thrives luxuriantly in the Island of
Maranhao, which, he says, furnishes the balsam of commerce in great
quantity. He also enumerates the many medicinal virtues of the balsam, making the curious statement that its healing virtues are also exblood in the Jewish
practice of circumcision.
696
time the tree yielding copaiba in the Island of Guadeloupe.
He relates in detail the manner of collecting the balsam, which he calls
huile de copau. The vessels in which the balsam is collected are made
of the fruit of the calabash, a kind of gourd. The collection, he states,
takes place about three months after the rainy season that is, in March
for the countries north of the equator, and in September for the countries south of this line.
The balsam, he states, closes all kinds of
wounds except those inflicted by gunshot. He declares it to be a powerful febrifuge, having been used with almost marvelous effect in the
fever epidemics at Rennes and Xantes in 1719.
Jos. Jacquin (338a)
for the
first
West
Indies in Linnsei
Martiniq
760
He
officinalis.
where
it
promiscuously among trees yielding balsams of Tolu and Peru. Jacquin described the flowers of this tree as having four petals, and the
calyx as being nonexistent yet he considers it identical with that of
Piso and Marcgrav, which is, however, emphatically denied by De Tussac (656a) in Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles.
;
Jacquin's plant
officinalis.
Until
^
-1
1
A.
82 1
it
*1t
was
SO
At
officinalis to C.
Jacquin's plant
ism
cate that it could not well have been the official balsam
tree, while by
reason of the publication of Piso's account Brazil had
been' generally
considered the geographical source of the official balsam
However
30
and
published
(Arzney-Gewaechse)
In 1826 Hayne (305a)
rapidly.
resembear
all
however
which,
described sixteen different species,
the
and
form
the
in
mainly
distinctive features residing
blances, their
the
place
to
endeavors
arrangement of the leaves. Hayne especially
work
ancient
this
that
being
species made known by Piso, the difficulty
species
only
The
minium.
stated that the wood is colored as if with
is
description
that
answer
that, in the opinion of Hayne, would
color
which
pale-red
is
which
bijuga, the wood of the branches of
of the tree.
Hayne
mav appear
dad)
Negro,
Rio
lower
Amazon,
(Lower
Desf.
guianensis,
Copaifera
2.
Cayenne, Surinam).
Piauhy).
and
(Bahia
Martius
C. coriacea,
*.
Brazil)
of
provinces
(Continental
4. C. Langsdorffii. Desf.
the
now
until
increased
steadily
has
species
known
The number of
African
five
and
American
twenty-three
recognizes
Index Kewensis
SpeC
conBrazilian
the
of
territory
vast
the
from
obtained
The copaiba
P
n
hl
s
the
in
col
g
is
tributaries,
its
and
tinenralong the
Other
export
of
place
a
Maranhao Island is also
1-^
Amazon
port of Para.
Angustura
and
Maracaibo
are
ports
shipping
ff s f
p <<;nno \ rartao-ena f Colombia)
Vf^T?'
and Kio de Ja,
neiro.
CORIANDRUM
v^
v"v^
5
uonanarum sativum
it has
which
from
ranean and the Caucasus,
Americas
the
to
even
world,
whole
the
of
parts
temperate
r
r
..
rs
: _U^-o A in the Mosaic DOOK:
is iiiui
Mediter
u~<-
^o
nun
^J^^fJ^
uas
was menExodus and
Tt
It
Ebers (213).
us
mm was usee
uy
- -
^
S
r !tfS
S
--"
as well
cultivation ; Pliny
n Egypt, ana it
licine.
its
,ua%
fine
dt
Sne ve'f
We
considered indigenous to Malabar, Ceylon, Amboina (of the Molucca Islands), the Philippines, and Java. Joannes
Scott (588a), in his dissertation on the medicinal plants of Ceylon
(Edinburgh, 1819), states that the seeds of Croton tiglium under the
name of "gayapala" are a most powerful purgative, and also that the
leaves are very acrid, causing an intolerable burning in the mouth and
Croton tiglium
is
throat.
More
recently,
occurrence of croton tiglium in all parts of the fertile and wealthy province
of Assam, especially in the dry districts. He states that the demand for
the drug is small and that the plant has a tendency to spread. Hence
efforts are being made to restrict the growth and keep it within certain
bounds.
The ancient Hindu physicians were not acquainted with the drug,
which seems to have originated in China, from whence at an early day
the seeds were also introduced into Persia (where they are now called
dand), by way of the caravan routes of Central Asia. Subsequently
the Arabs derived their knowledge of the seeds from the Persians, their
name, hab-el-kathai (Cathay seeds), being in turn suggestive of the
Chinese origin (209). Some of the vernacular Indian names, according
to Dymock, seem to indicate that the plant reached India through
the
Himalayan province of Nepal (209).
The drug was imported into Europe by the Dutch during the sixteenth century. The first account of the croton tiglium plant
in European literature, however, must be credited to the Portuguese physician
Christoval Acosta, who in 1578 described the wood as lignum
pavanse
(or L. panavse 01 L. moluccense), and the seeds as pini
nuclei moluccani (3). The prominent writings of Rheede
(1678), who gives the
Malayan name cadel avanacu (547), Ray (1688) and others
subsequently, gave the drug due consideration, while C.
Bauhinus (1671)
differentiated between several synonyms of the seeds
and woods that
were then in use. To Caspar Commelyn (1667-1731) is
attributed the
hrst use of the name cataputise minores for the
seeds, while the wellknown synonym grana tiglii is also stated to have been originated
in
his time. And yet this author's work on the
Flora Maiabarica ( 1696)
32
appeared
first
in 1693) (179).
As
regards the use of the oil derived from the seeds, E. von
Hirschheydt, in the exhaustive historical introduction to his dissertation (318a), mentions that Peter Borellus, a French physician (16201689), in 1657 lauds the cathartic virtues of the oil which in as small
an amount as two drops caused purging even when merely rubbed into
the skin. Similar mention of its virtues is made by Rumphius (Herbarium Amboinense, 1750). Geoffroy (260) in his Materia Medica
( 1756) reports that the natives of India use this oil to make what they
call the royal purging apple (poma cathartica), the mere odor of which
The directions for
is said to purge persons of delicate constitution.
making this potent "apple" are as follows
Macerate an orange or lemon in oil of tilli (croton oil) for one
month. Remove it, hold to the nostrils and inhale the breath; soon
afterwards the bowels will move.
About 1750, Cohausen, according to several authorities, employed
the oil with success in cases of tenia.
Although during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the
remedy had been frequently used, it seems that toward the end of the
eighteenth century it fell into oblivion, probably on account of the
its use was revived
However,
its administration.
dangers
v.x^
U^Vixu,.^
attending:
fe
White
Marshall, observed the action of the seed in medical practice in India,
and brought the drug again to the notice of the profession in Europe
(209). Ainslie in 1813, and Conwell in 1819, by their publications gave
it further prominence.
In connection with its reintroduction we note
the interesting fact that a Mr. Short then brought the drug to Europe
and was so fortunate as to secure the right (license) to its exclusive
sale in England. That it at once became an important drug is shown
by the attention then given it in medical literature. An extensive list
period
the
covering
tiglium
croton
on
literature
the
of references to
from 1820 to 1835 alone, may be found in Hirschheydt's dissertation (318a). According to the latter authority (1890) the seeds and
the oil are seldom used in Europe other than in veterinary practice, as he
presthe
by
exerted
influence
uncontrollable
the
states, on account of
oil.
in
the
body)
albuminoid
(an
ricin
toxic
powerfully
ence of the
in
Linnaeus
by
established
was
croton
genus
the
stated,
As already
ricinus
for
synonym
Greek
the
from
adopted
1737, tne name bem S
have
tiglium,
a
croton
of
those
also
as
which,
of
seeds
communis, the
origin
of
the
As
to
Greek).
in
kroton
(dog-tick,
resemblance to a tick
*t, *.~~~, *:~i:.,~-. o^vmo -,ii-v.^r;tip<: asrribe it to the Moluccan island of
(696)
vernacular
and
botanical
Greek word tilos, meaning
and
numerous
are
Linnaeus
by
given
synonvms antedating the name
e. g. by
works,
botanico-medical
older
are generally carried by the
synonyms
post-Linnaean
The
others.
Dale (i79),'Bauhinus (47) and
pharmain
seen
ever
if
rarely
are
recorded in the Index Kewensis
follows:
as
are
They
reproduced.
ceutical print and may well be
diarrhea.
33
The
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
Thunberg, 1784.
C. jamalgota, Hamilton, 1825.
C. pavana, Hamilton, 1825.
C. acutus,
Knrkas
CUBEBA
Cubebs (Piper cubeba) is the berry of a shrub indigenous to Java,
Southern Borneo, and Sumatra. Masudi (413) in the tenth century
Edrisi (221), 1153, mentions
refers to cubebs as a product of Java.
the berries as among the imports of Aden. That they were known in
Europe as early as the eleventh century is evident from the writings
of Constantius Africanus (165), of Salerno, while Abbatissa Hildegarde (316) of Germany mentions them in the thirteenth century, at
which time they had become an article of European trade. They were
sold in England in 1284, an d at that time, or thereabout, were known
to European countries generally. The price in 1596 was equal to that
of opium or of amber. Cubeb berries were introduced into medicine
Middl
cusso
The cousso
where
it is
000
to 8,000
its
uses,
CYPRIPEDIUM
)
To
as King,
Wood &
Bache,
etc.
34
ELATERINUM
Elaterium is the dried juice of the fruit of Ecballium elaterium, common throughout the Mediterranean regions, from Portugal
to Southern Russia and Persia, as well as through Central Europe.
The method of preparing elaterium, as described by Dioscorides (194),
The drug is also mentioned by
is practically that of the present day.
Theophrastus (633). Elaterium is a powerful hydragogue cathartic,
parallelling Croton tiglium in its vicious action, and has been empirthe earliest times to the natives of the countries it
inhabits.
Clutterbuck (154), ( l8l 9> London Medical Repository, xii,
cakeirregular
in
elaterium
obtaining
of
process
a
recommends
1-9)
p.
like fragments, which is now the form in which it is employed in medicine, hence the common term "Clutterbuck's elaterium."
ically
known from
ERGOTA
disturber
known
as
a
been
has
period,
earliest
the
This drug, from
of flour, it having been long since observed that flour made of rye
containing ergot gave rise to the disease now known as ergotism.
frightful
and
epidemics
malignant
the
of
many
When we consider that
an
including
Europe,
mediaeval
of
history
pestilences recorded in the
it
spurred
rye,
to
ascribed
were
1816,
as
late
epidemic occurring as
and
"mormalignus"
"convulsivus
as
terms
can be seen that such old
well
chosen.
were
disease,
ergot
the
to
applied
bus spasmodicus," once
deterauthoritatively
ergot
of
nature
the
Not till 1838, however, was
Quekett
35
i<n
1-!.
Waterford, N. Y., 1807, under the name "Pulvis parturiens," highly
commended it in a paper contributed to the Medical Repository, which
gave ergot the American introduction that, supported by other authoriErgot is a gift of home obties, pushed the drug into prominence.
stetric practice established over three centuries ago by the German
midwives. (See Lloyd Brothers' Drug Treatise No. XII on Ergot.)
1
EUCALYPTUS
Eucalyptus globulus, and other species of eucalyptus, are indigenous to Australia, where the leaves are employed by the natives as
a remedy for intermittent fever. It was thus introduced to Europeans
towards the middle of the nineteenth century. Possibly its employment by the crew of the ship La Favorite, who in the vicinity of Botany
Bay were nearly decimated by fever, from which they recovered
through the use of an infusion of the leaves of eucalyptus, first gave
the drug conspicuity, through the efforts of Dr. Eydoux and M. de
Salvy. Dr. Ramel, of Valencia, however, has the credit of introducing
the remedy to the Academy of Medicine, 1866, thus bringing the drug
to the attention of the medical profession, by whom it is now used in
extract form, in other directions than that for which it was originally
commended. The distilled oil of eucalyptus has now an extended reputation and use. The date of its first use by the natives of Australia is
unknown.
EUONYMUS
Euonymus atropurpureus and Euonymus americanus
36
EUPATORIUM
Eupatorium perfoJiatum,
boneset, or thoroughwort,
is
indigenous
in the
form
of an infusion or tea was very popular with the settlers being found
in every well-regulated household.
As a bitter tonic its uses became
known to the early members of the American medical profession, and
was handed therefrom to physicians of the present day. Its American
history is probably paralleled by the record of this herb in other
countries.
;
FICUS
(Ficus carica) is native to Asia Minor and Syria, extending into Africa and Oriental countries, the Mediterranean islands,
and elsewhere. It is now cultivated in the temperate countries of the
entire world. The fig tree and its leaves are repeatedly mentioned in
the Scriptures, where they are symbolical of peace and plenty. Charlemagne, in 812, ordered its cultivation in Central Europe, and in the
reign of Henry VIII fig trees still standing in the garden of Lambeth
Palace were brought to England, though the fig was unquestionably
cultivated in England before that date. The fig has been used from
all times as a food and as a confection, and it is repeatedly mentioned
Its tri-lobed leaf is synonymous with primitive
in the Arabian Nights.
religions and has occupied a more or less conspicuous place in symbolic
worships from the earliest date.
The
fig tree
FOENICULUM
Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare) is indigenous from the Caspian Sea
to the Greek peninsula and other Mediterranean countries, growing
wild over a large part of Southern Europe, especially in the vicinity
of the sea. It is also cultivated in favorable localities, as in Saxony,
France, and Italy. Charlemagne encouraged its cultivation. Its emis indicated
time,
as
all
from
been
has
Europe
ployment in Northern
from
dating
recipes
medical
domestic
Anglo-Saxon
by the fact that
^
in
seeds
of
the
use
The
place.
it
a
give
at least the eleventh century
employment
its
well
as
as
infusion
of
form
the
in
domestic medication
mention.
than
a
more
need
to
established
well
in bread-making is too
37
GALLA
Oak
GAMBIR
Gambir (or gambier) (Ourouparia gambir)
is
a shrub native to
GAULTHERIA (THE
The
OIL)
or
Rob
and
"Sirup
Anti-Syphilitica"
was
38
the subject more clearly in that it gives a very fair description of oil
of gaultheria as well as making a statement to the effect that it is
the same as sweet birch oil, and showing further that many different
plants yield the same oil.
that oil of wintergreen was used somewhat in domestic medicine about that date, and also by Dr. Wooster Beach, the forerunner
of Eclectic medicine, is evidenced, for Dr. Beach in his American
But
have overlooked
it.
in infuso,
Gaulthier,
loca Theae.
Medico
oil.
(503).
Boston,
1808.
No
mention of the
oil
or plant.
39
P. C.
I, p.
171, 1817.
(43a)
is
(69),
II,
p.
28.
Boston, 1818.
very dissimilar.
"It exists very exactly in some of the other species of the same genus, particularly in Gaultheria hispidula; also in Spircea ulmaria and the root of Spiraa
lobata.
It is particularly distinct in the bark of sweet birch, Betula lenta, one
of our most useful and interesting trees.
"This taste and odor reside in a volatile oil, which is easily separated by
distillation.
The essential oil of Gaultheria, which is often kept in our druggists' shops, is of a pale or greenish-white color, and perfectly transparent.
It
is one of the heaviest of the volatile oils, and sinks rapidly in water, if
a sufficient quantity be added to overcome the repulsion of the two heterogeneous
fluids.
Its taste is aromatic, sweet, and highly pungent.
"The oil appears to contain the chief medicinal virtue of the plant, since I
know of no case in which the leaves, deprived of their aroma, have been emp ' oy m * or any P ur P se
They are nevertheless considerably astringent, etc.
"The leaves, the essence, and the oil of this plant are kept for use in the
-
apothecaries' shops.
"The oil, though somewhat less pungent than those of peppermint and
ganum, is employed for the same purposes/' etc.
ori-
The Pharmacopeia
authoritative
It
of the United
method of making
States,
1820, gave
the
8
first
it.
to the profession
40
by the
New York
We
and birch.
Swaim's Panacea.
The important
fact elucidated
by the foregoing
oil
the auspices of the New York Medical Society, it was positively shown
that Swaim had replaced the sassafras of Quackinboss' formula by
wintergreen oil and had also introduced corrosive sublimate into the
mixture.
Persons interested
in
this
will
find detail
reports as follows
American Journal
American Journal
American Tournal
GELSEMIUM
Common Names.
jessamine.
white
poison-vine,
white
mine, wild woodbine,
United
Southern
the
of
native
is
a
sempervirens
Gelsemium
from
Virthickets,
and
woods,
swamps,
States, being abundant in the
in
fifty
feet
twenty
to
climber,
handsome
ginia to Florida.
It is a
fraoverpowenngly
being
flowers
its
spring,
length, blooming in early
o-
inasmuch
and
jessamine,
not
a
gelsomino, meaning jasmine.
of
Holmes,
M.
E.
flowers,
yellow
as there is a true jessamine with
jessamine
has
yellow
term
the
that
London, considers it unfortunate
But
been applied to
4
it.
This
it is
common name,
41
however,
is
now
firmly es-
Its Italian
seminum*
Medical History. Barton and his co-laborers did not mention gelsemium, but Rafinesque (535), 1830, gave it a place, stating that
"root and flowerst are narcotic, their effluvia may cause stupor, tincture
of the root is used for rheumatism in frictions," a statement taken
almost literally from Elliott's (227) Botany of South Carolina and
Georgia, 1821.
The medical record (King) (356) had its origin
through the mistake of a servant of a Southern planter who was afflicted with fever.
This servant by error gave his master a decoction
of gelsemium root instead of the garden plant intended.
Immediate
loss of muscular power and great depression followed, all control of
the limbs was lost, the eyelids drooped and could not be voluntarily
opened. Death seemed imminent. But the effects finally wore away
and the man recovered, free from fever, which did not recur. An
observing physician took this experience as a text and prepared from
gelsemium a remedy which he called the "Electrical febrifuge.'' which
attained some popularity.
Finally the name of the drug concerned
was given to the profession. This statement is found in the first edition of King's American Eclectic Dispensatory, 1852, which work actually presented gelsemium to the world of medicine, although, as will
be shown later, the plant had a recorded position much earlier. King's
article on gelsemium was copied in substance by the United States Dispensatory, 1854, none of the preceding nine editions of that work having mentioned the drug.
But the fact is that Porcher (520) commended gelsemium in his report to the American Medical Association,
1849, an d, concerning its restricted local use in gonorrhea and rheumatism, referred to Frost's Elements of Materia Medica (250) (South
Carolina) as well as to several local journal articles.
For a long time following 1852 (at which date King's American
Dispensatory appeared) gelsemium remained an almost exclusive retried v of the Eclectic school but in i860 it attained a position
in the
United States Pharmacopeia, although not until 1880 did that
work
give place to any preparation of gelsemium. At present
the drug is
in much favor with many physicians of all schools,
but is generally
classed as one of the Eclectic remedies, bein? one of the
most important
in Eclectic therapy.
GENTIANA
ian
(p* ntiana
lu ^a)
j2?%*.
'
42
wounds.
GERANIUM
Geranium maculatum,
is
GLYCYRRHIZA
and root of glycyrrhiza,
mentioned
by Oribasius (479a) and Marcellus (404) in the fourth century, and
by Paulus .ZEgineta (494) in the seventh. It was known in the time
of Dioscorides ( 194) and was commonly known in Europe during the
Middle Ages. Its price in England, in the day of Henry III, was
equal to that of grains of paradise. It was one of the articles paying
duty to aid in the repairing of London Bridge in the day of Edward I,
Saladinus (570), in the fifteenth century, mentioned it as an
1305.
Italian medicine, and it was commonly known in the city of Frankfort
in 1450.
Mattioli (414), 1574, states that the juice, in the form of
Indeed, the record of
pastilles, was brought every year from Apulia.
this substance is to the effect that it has been an article of domestic
use, as a "sweet wood" for chewing, as a constituent of medicinal pastes, and in the form of a common water extract, since the
It is found in large quantities in the localities where
earliest times.
it is cultivated, in Sicily, Italy, and Spain, while in moderately recent
years we have seen immense amounts of licorice roots annually collected in the valleys of the Hermes and the Kayster, where probably
it has grown wild from all times.
Licorice, the dried rhizome
is
GOSSYPII CORTEX
Cotton Root Bark. Gossypii radicis cortex, is used as a stimulant
and emmenagogue, the decoction being considered, in the days of
American slavery, capable of producing abortion. It was thus introduced empirically by the Negroes, and came from thence into the hands
of the profession, being first employed by physicians of the Southern
United States. Following this introduction, Wallace Brothers, of
Journal,
Medical
(Eclectic
writer
the
of
Statesville, S. C. at the request
February, 1876, p. 70), forwarded to him a barrel of fresh cotton root
and
fluid
extract,
a
into
made
was
This
alcohol.
bark, preserved in
the
request
that
with
a
physicians,
practicing
distributed to American
43
GRANATUM (POMEGRANATE)
Punica granatum has been
ical times.
It is
now found
in cultivation
in all
from the
earliest histor-
warm
Also
^
(Exodus xxvui,
J
.?
\rTof
itZtfj"
alternating with
bells
f Pm
Many
hem
^F
The pomegranate was
gold.
fruits brought to Moses by the
of promise (302).
pomegranates
'
>
Rhodes
of
Island
the
of
coins
of
the
reverse
the
on
and
medals (422)
conspicuous
very
is
pomegranate
the
mythology
In Greek
(688).
fruit
The
abundance.
and
fecundity
symbolizes
(307, 191, 241), and
holdas
sculptures
in
represented
always
was dedicated to Juno, a deity
ing a pomegranate (I9 1 )pomethe
describe
Theophrastus
(633),
The Greek authors, e. g.,
Dioscondes
also
side;"
and
"roa
"roa"
of
names
granate under the
the
of
properties
medicinal
the
forth
sets
explicitly
(194), who quite
the
describe
who
authors
Roman
plant.
different parts of the
Among
CelPliny
Censorius
(514),
(132),
Cato
pomegranate and its uses are
Arabians,
the
example
for
writers,
Subsequent
sus (136), and others.
have
seem
to
but
pomegranate,
the
to
refer
also
in the ninth centurv,
and
Greek
their
of
writings
the
of
substance
mainly reiterated the
of
speaks
Nights"
"Arabian
(88)
The
Roman predecessors (422).
five dishes
cook
I
day
"Every
follows
as
cooked
the use of the seed
me
of
sought
they
yesterday
and
supper
for
for dinner, and the like
pomegranate
cooked
of
mess
a
seventh,
a
a sixth dish, yellow rice, and
Of
vii,
Vol.
185.)
Cairo,
of
p.
AH
seed" (Adventures of Mercury
and
Tragus
mentioned
(650)
be
the writers of the Middle Ages may
that
of
compilation
detailed
most
a
giving
T Bauhinus (47), the latter
pomegranate,
the
of
subject
the
on
time
which was known before his
until
the
not
was
It
connected.
is
including the myths with which it
was
pomegranate
the
of
literature
present century, however, that the
:
its
chemical aspects.
GRINDELIA
commerce,
in
found
is,
as
plant,
California
Grindelia, robusta, a
very
of
relationship
near
the
to
owing
of questionable authenticity,
the
of
attention
the
attracted
early
It
similar species of grindelia.
used
being
it
coast,
the
along
stations
Tesuit Fathers in their mission
Americans.
the
by
country
the
of
conquest
by the natives before the
to
attention
called
about
1863,
Cal.,
Canfield, of Monterey,
Dr C
native
its
toxicodendron,
rhus
of
grindelia as a remedy in the poison
Mr.
James
him.
to
known
become
use in that direction having
American
the
to
paper
a
contributed
Steele, of San Francisco, 1875,
this direction.
in
use
its
commending
Pharmaceutical Association
profession
the
with
favor
into
After that time the drug rapidly crept
of medicine.
GUAIACUM
Indies and
West
Guaiacum is
ban
from
was
Europe
into
Southern Florida. Its earliest importation
was
it
that
but
D.
1526;
Domingo, as recorded by Oviedo (487). A.
by
treatises
by
proved
is
date
known in Germany previous to that
the
to
native
tree,
evergreen
low
a
45
>
GUARANA
Guarana, a dried paste from the crushed seeds of Paullinia cupana,
was introduced into France from South America by a French officer
in 181 7, as a product of an unknown plant, this paste being made and
used by the tribe of Indians (Guaranis) from whom it took its name.
In 1826 Martius (409) identified the plant, which is called Paullinia
sorbilis in deference to Simon Paulli (493).
In 1840, (Am. Journ.
Pharm., pp. 206-208), Dr. Gavrelle presented a specimen of guarana to
the Paris Society of Medicine, the same being analyzed by M. de
Chastetus, who discovered "a crystallizable matter, which possessed the
chemical properties of caffeine."
In 1888 Professor H. H. Rusby
(564) (Amer. Jour, of Pharm., p. 267) authoritatively described the
manner in which the natives prepared Guarana from the seed, and in
their crude way produced the smoked sausage-like rolls familiar in
commerce. The date of its discovery by the Indian tribes whose preparation and use of the substance as "a stimulating substance" led to its
European
HiEMATOXYLON
Logwood (Hematoxylon campechianum,
L.)
is
the
wood
of a
tree used
throughout the civilized world as a dye stuff, in which direction we find it is most largely consumed. The tree is native to Central
America, being abundant in Campeachy, Honduras, and other sections
of that country.
Fliickiger (239) accepts that the wood was introduced into England in the latter half of the sixteenth century, because
in 1 581 its use was abolished by act of Parliament, for the reason that
it was considered a poor substitute for better dyes, and
was viewed in
the light of a sophisticant.
Eighty years later, probably because a
logwood
again permitted to enter England.
(368)
names
wood
Europe. The accounts of travelers and sailors at the
time of the great excitement produced by the discovery of the
abundant sources of wealth in the new world, almost universally mentioned logwood.
This is evident from the record found in such
narratives as appear in sailors' descriptions of -their voyages,
in Chamin quantities to
46
London Pharmacopoeia.
Hamamelis
fessor
John King, M.
D. (356), as a
wash and
as
an
injection.
The
hamaof
extract
distilled
or
hamamelis,
preparation known as distilled
century,
nineteenth
of
the
middle
the
about
Pond
melis. introduced bv
time,
present
the
at
demand
increasing
an
has
and
became very popular
under
pharmacopoeia
the
into
introduced
being
a substitute or imitation
the
title
"hamamelis water."
HEDEOMA
Hedeoma
herb,
fragrant
a
American pennyroyal,
temperate
the
throughout
distributed
generally
native to America, and
form
in
the
Indians
the
by
used
was
It
portions of North America.
settlers,
the
to
them
by
introduced
was
and
of decoctions and infusions,
use
chief
Its
profession.
medical
of
the
coming thence to the attention
at the present time
is
in
pulegioides,
is
Europe,
of
pennyroyal
the
with
confused
from This plant must not be
Europe,
throughout
common
pulegium,
Mentha
a small, aromatic herb.
Persia,
and
Minor
Asia
to
eastward
Sweden,
extending northward to
pennyroyal,
European
The
Arabia.
and
and southward to Abvssinia
neglect
by
therapeutic
into
fallen
has
also a common domestic remedy,
the profession.
HUMULUS
thickets
in
found
vine
climbing
a
Hops (Humulus lupulus)
and
beto
extending
and
Europe,
and along river banks throughout
America,
into
Introduced
regions.
Caspian
yond the Caucasus and
culare
Northwest
in
the
especially
and
hops have become acclimated,
and
GerFrance
in
existed
gardens
tivated in immense quantity. Hop
were
hops
Bavarian
and
centuries,
many in the eighth and ninth
William
that
asserted
been
has
It
esteemed in the eleventh century.
The
England.
in
hops
for
land
of
the Conqueror, 1069. granted the use
whilst
medicine,
stomachic
a
as
original use of hops was in decoction
all.
familiar
to
is
liquors
malted
their employment in the making of
extract,
in
and
decoction
simple
in
As a tonic, the hop is still valued
medicine.
of
profession
the
and
both by the people
is
47
no commercial importance
1772; Cutler (178), 1783; and Schoepf (582), 1785; Barton (43) first
bringing it before the medical profession, 1798. He credits the Cherokee Indians for its ascribed uses, and in the third part of his work
(1804) he devotes considerable attention to the drug. Rafinesque
(535) (1828) states that the Indians employed it as a stimulant, and
that the Cherokees used it for cancer, in which direction better remedies were to them known.
The principal use of hydrastis by the Indians, however, and which afterwards crept into domestic practice,
was as an infusion or wash for skin diseases and for sore or inflamed
eyes.
It was also employed as a stimulant for indolent ulcers, and as
an internal tonic. Hydrastis may be considered typical of the drugs
that are employed very extensively by the medical profession, through
their empirical introduction, it being recorded that even for gonorrhea
the Indians discovered its utility.
Early authorities on American medical plants, such as Barton
(43)
(1798 and 1804), Hand (298) (House Surgeon, 1820), Rafinesque
(535), Ehsha Smith (601) (1830), Kost (361) (1851), Sanborn
(57 1 ) ( l835)> g* J ve to hydrastis considerable conspicuity, whilst Dunglison's Medical Dictionary (203) pessimistically
(1852) states that in
Kentucky only it is used, and then only as an outward application for
f
wounds.
HYOSCYAMUS
Hyoscyamus
niger
is
distributed
Norway and
48
throughout
Finland.
It
Europe,
is found
from
in
the
a sample
Had Herodotus
it
or Tree."
said that other trees have been discovered by them which
yield fruit of such a kind that when they have assembled together in companies in the same place and lighted a fire, they sit round in a circle and throw
some of it into the fire, and they smell the fruit which is thrown on, as it burns,
and are intoxicated by the scent as the Hellenes are with wine, and when
more of the fruit is thrown on they become more intoxicated, until at last
they rise up to dance and begin to sing." Herodotus (Macaulay), Book I,
"Moreover
it
is
p. 99.
IPECACUANHA
The beginning
first
*This fable has a parallel in the quaint description given by Clusius concerning the
discovery of the healing virtues of nux vomica bark in cases of snake bite.
49
passage occurs
"Igpecaya or pigaya is profitable for the bloudie fluxe. The stalke
is a quarter long and the roots of another or more, it hath only four
or five leaves, it smelleth much wheresoever it is, but the smell is
strong and terrible."
According
Jesuit by the
name
60
The first definite information we have of ipecacuanha dates from
the publication of a work by Piso and Marcgraf (511), called "Historia Naturalis Brasilia," Amsterdam, 1648, chapter lxiv being entitled "De Ipecacuanha ejusque Facultatibus."
Two species are described, a white and a brown species, the latter evidently being the true
ipecacuanha plant. An illustration of the plant is added, which Merat
considers quite a creditable reproduction of the true ipecacuanha. The
entire chapter was reprinted, with French translation, by Merat
(422),
and inserted in his "Dictionnaire," as a testimony of the extreme exactness of the description given by Piso (511).
The
root
came
Europe
to
in
to the
quainted with the medicinal virtues of the root, sent for a supply, obtaining 150 pounds from Spain. Through this gentleman, directly or
indirectly, Helvetius (309) secured a new lot of the drt^,
skillfully managed to exploit by extensively advertising k as
"radix
anti-dysenterica," the origin of which, however, he kept a secret.
Finally the fame of the remedy came to the notice of Minister Colbert,
who ordered that the remedy be given an official trial in the Paris
municipal hospital.
(309)
popul
amon
personage than the dauphin. King Louis the XIV then bought
the secret from Helvetius for one thousand louis d'or, and
made the remedv
public property. He was induced to do so bv the combined
influences
of his physician, Ant. d'Aquin, and of Franc,, de Lachaise,
confessor to
the king. Gamier, the merchant, however, brought
suit in order to
obtain his share of profit in the transaction, but was
unsuccessful in
his efforts.
50
During the
Mutis.
tion, but. as
it
JALAPA
The purgative
um
purga,
is
tuber known under the common name jalap, Exoa gift of Mexico, and by reason of its cathartic
5i
became a favorite
in
Europe
in the
days of heroic
Europe.
white jalap.
Strangely enough, the exact botanical source of jalap
remained a question until 1829, when Dr. Coxe, of Philadelphia,
author of Coxe's American Dispensatory, identified the drug from living plants sent to him from Mexico, and published descriptions, with
colored plates, in the American Journal of Medical Sciences, 1829.
This celebrated cathartic, so much used by licensed physicians and in
domestic medication, is to be credited to the natives of Central America,
whose employment of the drug introduced it to European commercial
adventurers who, as a matter of business, made it known to the professions of medicine and pharmacy.
KINO
Pterocarp
Wester
Moore
(441
tW
Pterocarp
accepted as being very nearly identical with
the material yielded by
the kino tree of tropical Africa.
Kino is obtained by incising- the
r em Vmg
CXU
eS tben <M"g it by exposure
*
tothe ai r Tt 1S miWly astnn ent an ? has
been used in the manu<*
LtlZ'
facture of JL
wine.
!S
>
>
52
is
LACTUCARIUM
World
:tucanum, an extract known
name
LAPPA, (BURDOCK)
botanical
these
it is
titled
As
Bardana.
LEPTANDRA
Leptandra, Veronica virginica, grows in rich woodlands throughin
found
being
River,
Mississippi
east
of
the
States
out the United
have
woodlands
the
and
section
native
to
a
it
is
abundance wherever
local
many
under
known
species
are
various
The
undisturbed.
been
root,
Bowman
root,
Brinton
root,
Culver's
black
root,
as
names, such
physic root, etc., as used by the settlers. They derived their knowledge
of "the drug from the American Indians, and designated the plant by
the name of the man who used it in his practice, or from its characThe Delaware Indians called the plant quitel, and the Misteristics.
The lemon
tree,
54
Lemon
limun and this, by way of the Persian, is reor nimbu. Adam already in his Htndi-Kosha,
Sanskrit nimbu into Hindi limn.
This transthe Sanskrit has evidently coined or adopted
from the North Indian vernaculars. In Cashmeer it is still called
from
the Hindu
the Arabic
limu, limbu,
lated to
(Calcutta, 1829), translates the
lation is no doubt correct, but
the
word
is
nimbu. There are many names in Sanskrit for the Citrus-fruits, a number of
them standing for lemon. The Modanavinoda (explained on p. 231, New Remedies, August, 1878) (399a) mentions two kinds of nimbu (or nimbuka), one
of which is sour, and the other sweet. Another native term is nisbu, according to
the Sabdakalpadruma. The Medievo-Greek is leimonion lemone. The lemon is
first mentioned in the book on Nabathaean Agriculture, under the name hasia (see
Meyer, Gesch. d. Bot. III., 68).
Dr. Charles Rice, New Remedies, Sept., 1878.
LINUM
Flaxseed, or linseed (Linum usitatissimum) has been cultivated
from all times in the Old World. From the dropping of its seeds
it may become a weed, and thus is found wild in more or less favored
locations throughout the temperate and tropical regions of the globe.
Flax as a fibrous plant has been utilized throughout the journey of
human civilization. The Egyptian tombs carry paintings illustrating
the weaving of flax into cloth the grave-clothes of the early Egyptians
were made from flax, its record having been traced back to at least
2300 B. C. The seeds of the plant have ever been employed, both as
a food and as a medicine. All the early historians, such as the Greek
Alcman of the seventh century B. C, Thucydides and Pliny (514),
refer to its qualities as a food, reciting that the seeds were used by
the people, both externally and internally, as medicines. Charlemagne
promoted its growth in Northern Europe. The plant reached Sweden
and Norway from its native land before the twelfth century.
;
LOBELIA
Lobelia, or Indian tobacco, Lobelia inflata, was conspicuously
introduced by Samuel Thomson (638) in the beginning of the nineteenth century.
It has been, in domestic medication, in the practice
of the Thomsonians. and also of the Eclectics, one of the most valued
remedial agents of the American flora (388b). Following its empirical
use, the first printed record concerning its emetic properties is that
by the Rev. Manasseh Cutler, LL. D. (178), who in the American
Academy of Science, 1785, under the title "Account of Indigenous
Vegetables," mentions
it
Following
Schopf (582), 1787. incorrectly ascribed to it astringent properties, stating erroneously that it was used in ophthalmia, evidently confusing the properties of Lobelia inflata with those of its relative. Lobelia syphilitica.
The Indians of North America employed lobelia.
this,
55
Drake
198)
It
in
;
LYCOPODIUM
From the beginning
podium (clavatum, and
of recorded time the minute spores of Lycoother species), known also to the early botMuscus terrestris. or Muscus
for their therapeutic virtues. This plant, the common club moss, is
found throughout Central and Northern Europe, Russian Asia, even
56
The
MALTUM
(Hordeum
kiln-dried,
barley,
Germinated
medication.
systematic
lore
of
the
dates
early
since
a
very
liquors
malted
of
making
in
the
employed
has been
beverage
both
as
a
use,
domestic
in
been
have
liquors
malt
date, and
of
malt
into
introduction
The
period.
long
very
for
a
and an extract,
semi-proof
the
use
empirical
the
from
resulted
pharmacopeia
the
middle
the
the
of
after
years
few
which
a
Malt,"
of
"Extracts
prietary
professional
use.
in
well
as
as
domestic
in
popular
last century became
other
submany
with
(as
however
is,
medicine
Its introduction to
manufacof
efforts
the
to
largely
due
otherwise),
stances of merit or
turing pharmacists.
MANNA
Fraxinus
ash,
manna
the
by
supplied
Manna of commerce is
the
and
Minor,
Asia
Switzerland,
Italy,
ornus, of the Southern Tyrol,
In
Mediterranean
in
being
foliage
the
tree,
ornamental
an
Central Europe it grows as
Acform
in
diverse
fruit
the
and
great variation in shape of leaflets,
fifteenth
the
to
previous
Hanbury
(240),
cording to Fliickiger and
was
and
East,
the
from
imported
was
century the manna of Europe
natural
a
was
manna
days
early
In
not derived from the manna ash.
expensive,
more
much
and
present,
at
exudation, much scarcer than
also
and
increased
artificially
now
being
the increase in the production
the
century
sixteenth
the
During
marked bv a decrease in quality.
branches
and
trunk
the
incising
of
devised
plan referred to above was
increasing
largely
thus
gum,
the
of
to produce a more copious supply
strenuwas
method
the
although
supply,
the amount of the market
Gibelmanna
name
The
enactments.
ously opposed by legislative
ot
range
Madoma
the
of
eminence
manna-mountain, by which an
furnished
mountain
this
that
mountains in Sicily is known, indicates
*""
**"*
manna during
57
jalap.
Its
home
medication.
to
writer
this
with
arranged
Preface)
(see
Fliickiger
Professor
subOne
plants.
and
drugs
American
the
give unitedly the record of
printed
being
article
the
Manna,"
'American
was
stance considered
in the Am. Journ. Pharm., 1897, pp. 1 to 10.
MARRUBIUM
Horehound, Marrubium vulgare, is indigenous to Europe, but
has been naturalized in America, where it is now very common. Its
use as a bitter decoction led to its early introduction into domestic
medicine, as well as to its popular use as a bitter flavor in candy. Probably the well-known horehound candy may be cited as a domestic
medicine that has become popular as a confection. The date of the
use of horehound as a sweetened domestic tea must have been very
early in the records of European home medication.
MASTICHE
Mastic, Pistacia lentiscus, is an evergreen shrub, native to the
Mediterranean shores, from Syria to Spain, being found also on the
The collection of mastic,
adjacent islands as far as the Canaries.
however, is localized to the northern part of the Island of Scio, where
from all time the tree has been known, exuding most abundantly the
resinous tar that, when dried, is known as mastic. The origin of its
use is lost in antiquity. Theophrastus (633), fourth century B. C,
mentions it, and both Dioscorides (194) and Pliny (514) refer to it,
in connection with the Island of Scio, or Chios.
The writer of this
article made a study of mastic during a journey to the Orient, but
as yet has not published the paper. By distillation with alcohol, mastic
produces a drink, this also being described in the paper in preparation,
the drink being probably of great antiquity, and known to the Greeks
and Romans. The use of mastic in medicine followed its empirical
employment as a breath sweetener (it being sold in all Oriental bazaars
for this purpose) and as a flavor for cordials and other drinks.
Perhaps the first record of its authoritative employment in medicine is
about the thirteenth century, by the Welsh "Meddygon Myddfai"
(57) ( see Note, p. 1), as an ingredient of ointments.
MATICO
Matico, Piper aneustifolium
Brazil
Its qualities
ned Matico,
legend being
observed that the bleeding was thereby stopped. This legend, current
in South America, gave to the shrub the name soldiers herb, or tree.
(See Stramonium.)
It is probable, however, that he learned of its
native use by the Indians. In the beginning of the nineteenth century
matico came to the attention of the profession of medicine in North
58
an
and astringent.
The
MATRICARIA
Matricaria chamomilla, German chamomile, is the cultivated
form of Chrysanthemum parthenium, being cultivated for domestic
distinguished from the Anthemis nobilis, or Roman
chamomile. It has been in domestic use so long as to have made it
familiar to all German housewives, and considerable demand has been
created for it in sections of America where Germans have settled. It
is a home remedy of antiquity.
use, in
which
it is
MEL
Honey
borax
orthodox physicians.
dah (yellow rice) is a word still used in Turkey, and
of rice dressed in honey and saffron." Burton.
"Zar-
MENTHA PIPERITA
Peppermint is found throughout North^ America as well as Eng
clergyman
land and the Continent,
"Mentha palust
Peper-Mint" and is recommended by him as a remedy for weakness of the stomach and for diarrhea. Its cultivation was extensive
in some parts of England as early as 1750, the herb being carried to
London for distillation and the making of the oil. Peppermint is a
and also as a
Kentucky
59
MENTHA
Spearmint
VIRIDIS
common
throughout Europe, Asia, and North America, and, escaping from cultivation, is found wild throughout most of
the temperate regions of the world. Parkinson, 1640, speaks of it as
a garden plant only (492), and its mention in early mediaeval lists of
plants demonstrates that it was cultivated in the convent gardens of
the ninth century. Turner's Herbal! (656), 1568, calls it Spere Mynte.
Its use is largely that of a domestic and popular flavor in confectionery
and as a perfume. In the form of an aromatic tea it has been a great
favorite in domestic medicine, as is true also of its harsher relative,
peppermint.
is
MEZEREUM
mezereum
versant with domestic medicine in mediaeval English times, being employed by the herbalists, and also, somewhat, by the medical profession
of that day. It was recognized in Culpeper (175) as an acrid substance, generally applied externally, although it was given internally
in dropsy and some other affections, about a dram of the dried bark
of the tree being mixed with three parts of water, and taken internally. Hooper (325) in his Medical Dictionary states that a prevailing
method of preparation was to macerate thin slices of the bark of the
fresh root in vinegar and apply it externally.
In Stephenson and
Churchill's Medical Botany (614a) a Mr. Pier son serves as authority
for a Dr. Russel, who, as did Mr. Pierson, reviewed the uses of the
drug as a substitute for mercury and as an application in scrofulous
and cutaneous affections, but with decided opposition to its use, on account of its exceeding acridity, a refreshing innovation in former orthodox medication. This imported, disagreeable drug crept into the
United States Pharmacopeia and American practice by reason of the
fact that it was made a constituent of the Compound Syrup
of Sarsaparilla.
MOSCHUS
Musk, Moschus
lived about the middle of the sixth century
A. D. Benjamin de Tudela
(55 a )> who traveled through the East about 1160-1173 A. D also
mentions musk, stating that its native home is in Thibet.
Its sale in
Egypt was mentioned by Leo Africanus (378b), 1526. Its introduction to medicine, however, came at a much earlier
period, its employ-
ment
its
MYRISTICA
New
The
MYRRHA
Myrrh, a gum-resin from Commiphora myrrha, has been a constituent of incense, perfume, and such, in ceremonial religious life, as
well as an article employed by the common people from the days of
the most remote antiquity. It was one of the rare and precious gumresins in the days of the Bible, being mentioned in connection with
such substances as frankincense and olibanum. That it was highly
valued in the days of Solomon is evident from the fact that it is menconspicuously in connection with the gifts brought by the
It is yet obtained from Arabia, the
present writer finding it in the bazaars of Aden (and adjacent Arab
bazaars), a city that had an existence as a port of export for Oriental
products in very early days. Theophrastus (633), Pliny (514), and
other early writers mention this drug, which from all times has been
valued in domestic medicine for its aromatic qualities, and as a constituIn Herodotus (Macaulay,
ent of incense in religious ceremonies.
Book II, p. 153) it is named as one of the substances used by the Egyptioned
tians in
"First with a crooked iron they draw out the brains through the nostrils,
extracting it partly thus and partly by pouring in drugs; and after this with
a sharp stone of Ethiopia they make a cut along the side and take out the
whole contents of the belly, and when they have cleared out the cavity and
cleansed it with palm-wine they cleanse it again with spices pounded up; then
they fill the belly with pure myrrh pounded up and with cassia and other spices
except frankincense, and sew it together again."
61
quality, strych-
OPIUM
The discovery of
Its
Compounds."
PAREIRA
Pareira brava (Chondrodendron tomentosum) is a climbing
shrub, native to Peru and Brazil, and adjacent sections of South
America. The Portuguese missionaries of the seventeenth century
who visited Brazil learned of its reputed qualities from the natives,
who under the name abutua or butua valued it highly for its theraThe Portuguese gave it the name Pareira brava, or
peutic virtues.
wild vine, with reference to its mode of growth. Its reputed medicinal
qualities, learned from the natives, were made conspicuous by Michel
Amelot, ambassador of Louis XIV to Lisbon, who found it in that
The botanist Pomet (519),
city and carried it with him to Paris.
Paris.
After
an
Drugs."
of
"History
his
in
plant
the
described
1694,
eventful botanical record embracing considerable discussion as well
as confusion with some other drugs, during which Pareira brava enit dropped from general
Europe,
in
conspicuity
professional
joyed
for
it being now pracmade
long
pretensions
extraordinary
the
use,
tically forgotten.
PEPO
an
inform
of
the
in
pepo,
Cucurbita
pumpkin,
the
The seed of
home
favorite
long
a
been
has
mass,
pulpy
in
a
fusion as well as
it to the medical
introduced
use
which
parasites,
intestinal
remedy for
pumpkin
seed
used
has
profession
medical
the
profession. Although
remedial
other
prefer
now
they
rule
as
a
direction,
somewhat in this
pomegranate
and
worms
round
for
employed
being
agents, santonin
PHYSOSTIGMA
is the
venenosum),
(Physostigma
bean
Calabar
Physostigma,
Niger
and
of
the
mouths
the
near
growing
vine
fruit of an African
ordeal
the
of
one
furnished
it
where
Guinea,
the Old Calabar Rivers,
is
The
seed
Africa.
Western
tropical
of
tests of the pagan tribes
in
the
administered
was
and
Bean,"
"Ordeal
therefore known as the
It
was
be.
might
case
the
as
infusion,
or
form of either an emulsion
its
about
1840
Daniel
(182),
W.
Dr.
F.
introduced to England by
before
read
paper
a
him
by
mentioned
method of use being again
of
EdinBalfour
Professor
(36),
1846.
the Ethnological Society,
missionary
a
Thompson,
C.
W.
Rev.
the
burgh obtained the plant from
before
read
paper
a
it
in
described
to the west coast of Africa, and
of
History
his
in
also
it
including
the Royal Societv of Edinburgh,
discovered
was
eye
the
of
pupil
the
Plants." Its power of contracting
the
paralyzing
of
power
Its
Edinburgh.
bv Dr. T. R. Fraser (246^1 of
63
its
native employment as
PHYTOLACCA
Poke
a poultice to inflammatory conditions of the cow's udder, in the disease known as garget, a circumstance which has given to the plant
one of its common names, garget plant.
Phytolacca crept thence
into more extensive use in domestic medicine, a tincture of the same
PILOCARPUS
Pilocarpus jaborandi
rections.
PIMENTA
Allspice
(Pimenta
is
begin
It
has received
many
dif-
ferent names in its passage through various countries. Its chief use
is as a spice, but a distilled water made therefrom has also
been employed.
PIPER
(Piper
tive to the forests of Malabar and
duced to other tropical countries,
and
from
all
PODOPHYLLUM
This handsome plant, Podophyllum peltatum, known also as mandrake, or may apple, is one of the most attractive features of the early
spring in North America, resisting with remarkable efficiency the aggressive inroads of the agriculturist. It was used by the North American Indians, the Cherokees employing the fresh juice of the root for
deafness, and the Wyandottes made a drastic cathartic, from which the
drug's harsher qualities were removed by roasting. The once celeemployed
the
others,
and
Smith
Peter
(605)
doctors,"
"Indian
brated
root as an escharotic, in which direction it came into early veterinary
practice.
The early American physicians and writers on medicine
praised its qualities as a purgative, its active cathartic nature having
Indians.
The
the
of
days
the
from
said,
been
has
been known, as
vegetable substitute for the once popular antimonial plaster used so
freely by "Regular" physicians was the Compound Tar Plaster of the
sanguinaria.
and
phytolacca.
podophyllum,
contained
This
Eclectics.
PRUNUM
runus
of
shores
the
Greece,
native
to
prune
wild
believed to descend from a
Pliny
Persia.
into
even
reaching
Caucasus,
the Black Sea, and the
plum
the
of
varieties
numerous
of
the
one
that
(514) records the fact
pulp
the
of
The
fruit.
laxative
a
afforded
tree known in his day
medical
the
as
by
well
as
medicine
prune has been used in domestic
concerned
those
of
efforts
the
following)
(or
profession, parallelling
ingredient
an
was
prune
French
the
of
pulp
in early medication. The
not
record
does
History
Electuary.
of the once celebrated Lenitive
formerly
so
confections
the
in
fruit
the beginning of the use of this
popular in domestic medicine.
65
PYRETHRUM
Spanish chamomile (Anacyclus pyrethrum), is a
widely-distributed plant known in different countries under different
names. According to Pliny (514) it was the herb used by the Magians
under the name parthenium against intermittent fevers, and according
to Dioscorides (194) it is the plant that, under the name anthemis,
was used in the same manner. It is mentioned in the "Arabian Nights"
(88) under the name ukhowan.
It is found throughout European
Turkey, and according to Forskal southward to the mountains of
Yemen, where it is called mceniat. According to De Candolle (122)
its introduction into Britain was perhaps before the coming of the Romans.
Pellitory, or
669
cultivation and, having escaped therefrom, as a wild plant.
Once a
popular remedy in agues, its use is now practically discontinued, even
in domestic medicine.
Physicians as a rule neglect it, but it is employed by them in a few exceptional instances.
QUASSIA
Q
Quassi (see article Quassia Amara, J. U. Lloyd, Western Druggist,
Chicago, Jan., 1897), who used the plant as a secret remedy, with great
success, in the treatment of malignant fevers common to his locality
and climate. Daniel Rolander, a Swede, became interested in the drug,
and "in consequence of a valuable consideration" purchased from the
slave Quassi a knowledge of the drug composing his remedy.
Rolander returned to Stockholm in 1 756, when he introduced the
drug to
Europe^ In 1760 (or according to another reference,
1761) Carol.
Gust. Dahlberg, an officer of the Dutch army and an eminent
botanist,
a pupil of Linnaeus (385), returned to Sweden from
Surinam, where
he too had become acquainted with the slave Quassi, and through
kindness to him had so gained his affection that he revealed
riot only the
composition of his secret remedy, but even showed to him
the tree
from which the drug was derived. Dahlberg procured
specimens of
the root, flowers, and leaves of the tree, preserving
them in alcohol
1
Lannaeus
and estat
66
official
Pharma-
QUERCUS
strongly astringent and
has ever been used in domestic medicine where an astringent material
In the
is applicable, as for example, in dysentery, hemorrhages, etc.
form of a poultice, a decoction, and as a tincture it has a domestic record, probably in common with other species of oak in all countries.
The medical profession has added little, if anything, to the domestic
The bark
of the oak,
Quercus
alba,
is
medica
QUILLAJA
&
1782,
Soapbark, Quillaja saponaria, named by Molina (444),
having
American
tree,
South
of
bark
a
the
is
Chili/'
in his "History of
similar qualities to other soap weeds or barks, derived from various
plants and trees, and used by the natives of different countries as a
similar
to
those
purposes
for
material
a
as
rather
or
substitute for soap,
of
saponaria
literature
the
to
contributions
of soap. Among the first
Pharm.,
Jour,
Amer.
of
Charlard,
Boutron
is that of Henry, Jr., and
frothing
qualities
acrid,
well-known
now
the
which
1841, xii, p. 209, in
originated
the
name
that
being
statement
of the drug are mentioned, the
American
the
zvash.
In
to
meaning,
from the Chilean term quilloan,
United
of
the
Ruschenberger,
Dr.
1840,
Medical Intelligencer, Sept. 15,
article
an
contributes
211),
Phar.,
1841, PStates Navy {Am. Jour.
on
67
was
RESINA,
See
TEREBINTHINA
U. S P.)
Rhamnus
catharticus (Buckthorn) is of wide distribution, prevailing over Northern Africa, most of Europe, the Caucasus, and into
Siberia.
In some instances it becomes almost a small tree, Fluckiger
having a specimen 8 inches in diameter. It was known as a laxative
Wayth
Welsh
under the name Syrup of Buckthorn,
a' title
The
tree
(Rhamnus purshiana)
mountain ranges
of the Western Pacific States, being most abundant in California and
Oregon. Possibly collectors do not distinguish between this species
and Rhamnus californica. To the settlers of that region it has long
been known as Chittim wood, an infusion of the bark being used as a
is
cathartic.
H. Bundy, an Eclectic physician of Colusa, California, impressed with its value, brought the bark, under the name Cascara
Sograda, to the attention of Parke, Davis & Co., of Detroit,
Michigan.
This energetic firm introduced it in 1877. through the columns
of their
publication, New Preparations, (1877 and 1878).
The remedy became a great favorite, and within a reasonable
becomin
890
Dr.
J.
68
Hum, etc.
Summary.
To Dr.
due
J.
the credit of introducing the bark of Rhamnus Purshiana (Cascara
Sagrada) to the medical profession.
To "New Preparations," Parke, Davis & Co., of Detroit, Michigan,
(1877 and 1878) is due the credit of bringing the drug to the attention
of physicians and pharmacists. The firm of Parke, Davis & Co. introduced to the world the preparations of this drug, of which they
H. Bundy, Colusa,
California, 1877,
*s
U. Lloyd.
J.
t
j
the
in
valuable
remedy
as
a
Sagrada"
"Cascara
fornia, commended
note
means
of
brief
a
by
was
This
notice
constipation.
of
treatment
promisDr.
Bundy
aquifolium,
Berberis
on
paper
of
a
that was part
ing, however, to give it further attention, as follows
paper,
this
Sagrada
in
Cascara
on
treat
to
purpose
my
"It is not
make
mention
simply
I
Berberis,
the
with
connection
but using it in
it.
69
Rhamnus
Purshiana, under-
due time
its
RHEUM
Rhubarb (Rheum
is
RHUS GLABRA
Sumach, Rhus glabra, is found in most of the temperate parts
the United States, to which it is indigenous. The North American
dians used the powdered seeds to treat piles and as an aoolication
an
and
In domestic medication, following the Indians, the roots were used by the settlers for rheumatism, in
alcoholic tincture, as well as in infusion. In domestic medicine the
berries were also employed in a decoction, as a gargle in quinsy,
ulceration
of the mouth and throat, and, following the Indian use of the drug,
as a
wash
70
countries.
Its use in medicine as well as in perfumes dates from the
earliest times.
The Rosa gallica is said to have been introduced into
France by the Count of Champagne on his return from the Crusades
in 1241.
In the study of attar of roses made by the writer on the
bottom lands beneath Mt. Olympus in Turkey, the roses planted in
rows appeared much like raspberry fields, the roses being of a rather
The use of the rose in
insignificant appearance, but very fragrant.
confection form, in pharmacopeial medicine, once very popular, has,
with the exception of its employment in blue mass (Massa hydrargiurn), become nearly obsolete.
In the "Arabian Nights" (88), rose
water is often referred to, and in Turkish home life it is employed as
RUBUS
Rubus villosus, grows abundantly in most
United States. The roots of the various species as well as
Blackberry,
the
parts of
varieties
or rubus are more or less astringent and have been used in doThe
mestic medicine from the days of America's first settlement.
Cherokee Indians (Rafinesque [535]), chewed the root of this plant
and swallowed the saliva for a cough, probably its astringency being
helpful to the throat membranes. They also used a poultice of it for
piles, in which direction its mild astringency seems rationally to adapt
it.
A syrup of blackberry root has been a great favorite in some
sections of the country as a remedy for dysentery. This use of the
drug in domestic medication, in which it has always been valued in
America, led finally to its employment by the members of the medical
profession. The juice of the blackberry fruit, spiced and mixed with
whisky, is and has ever been a valued carminative drink in Kentucky
and other parts of the Southern United States, and founded the pharmacopeial blackberry cordial.
SABAL
The berry
palmetto, Serenoa serrulata, Sabal serrulata.
of the saw palmetto, practically unknown in medicine before 1879,
after
medicine,
in
and
pharmacy
in
both
conspicuity,
came rapidly into
that date. It had been observed by the settlers of the South that animals feeding on the matured fruit "grew very sleek and fat," a fact
that was ascribed to the therapeutic qualities of the berries, reasoning
from which they prepared a decoction of the fruit for domestic medi-
Saw
cation.
In
tide entitled
neighborhood
use in various directions. This
s
a
w
and
Preparations
July,
1879,
New
in
(467),
reproduced
article was
Medical
from
the
article
another
by
publication
followed in the same
7i
its
gave
especial attention,
and
it is
SABINA
(J
SACCHARUM
The sugar-cane (Saccharum officinarum)
cultivated in all
tropical countries, such as India, China, Mexico, the West Indies, etc.
Its native land is probably India, or the Indo-Chinese countries and
islands.
As made from the cane, sugar has been known from time
immemorial. It is mentioned by such early writers as Theophrastus
(633). Herodotus (314a), and others, who knew raw sugar as honey
of canes, and in the early Christian era sugar became well known under
the name saccharon. Dioscorides ( 194) , A. D. yy, describes it as obtained from India and Arabia Felix, stating that it resembled salt in
brittleness.
is
it
Sugar as a remedy
in itself
has been
ica
tion.
SALVIA
Sage, Salvia officinalis, has been used by the herbalists from all
time, being likewise employed as a flavor in culinary directions. Pliny
(514), Theophrastus (633), and other early writers mention this plant,
which is now cultivated in all temperate regions of the world. It is
still employed in decoctions as a domestic medicinal drink, and when
bruised the fresh herb is applied as a poultice to sprains and swellings.
Its empirical use antedates its employment in systematic medicine.
SANGUINARIA
Bloodroot, Sanguinaria canadensis, is found throughout the
temperate regions of the United States east of the Mississippi River.
It was used by the Indians as a dye for coloring their garments and
for staining their faces and bodies, in which direction it fulfilled the
double object of a coloring material as well as to keep away insects,
The Indians also used it as an acrid
it being disagreeable to them.
emetic and, mixed with other herbs, in the form of an ointment as
an application to indolent ulcers, its action being somewhat escharotic.
The early settlers employed it in these directions, while its efficacy in
coughs and eolds established it as a constituent of home-made comThe professional use as well as
pounds
great reputation of this drug and its alkaloidal constituents (388
are due to the Eclectic school of medicine, although its qualities had
been well established previous to the systematic efforts made by phy-
SANTALUM RUBRUM
is
a
santalinus),
(Pterocarpus
sanders
red
Red sandalwood,
small tree native to the southern part of the Indian Peninsula, being
found
also
It
is
Coast.
Coromandel
the
and
Mysore,
Canara,
found at
planfrom
chiefly
obtained
is
wood
The
Philippines.
in the Southern
neighlocalities
adjacent
and
Hills
Kurnool
tations in the forests of the
boring to Madras. The beginning of the use of the wood of this tree
antiqu
sandalwood was imported
Garcia de
the word red.
distinguishing
between
distinguishes
century,
sixteenth
in
the
Goa,
(480), of
73
In this connection it
red sanders, has none of the qualities of the Santalum album, or fragrant sandalwood. And yet it is recorded that all the languages of
India call it by the name red-colored sandalwood. In the Middle ages
it was used in Europe for coloring purposes, being quoted in England,
1326 and 1399, at three shillings per pound, and it was entered on
the accounts of the Monastery of Durham, 1530, along with spices
and groceries. It is used in pharmacy as a coloring agent, after the
manner in which it was employed in domestic economy of the olden
times for the same purpose.
SANTONICA
The "wormseeds"
are widely distributed in the northern hemisphere of the Old World, many varieties thereof being familiar to botanists and subject to much discussion.
The unopened flowers of the
head (wormseed) are collected in quantities on the vast plains or
steppes in the northern part of Turkestan, the distributing point being
the renowned fair of Nishni Novgorod, Russia, where, Julv 15th to
August 27th, the celebrated exchanges of the products occur! Wormseed, however, is found in the Oriental bazaars, being brought for
native and domestic use from the sections of country named, or from
SARSAPARILLA
The drug
sarsaparilla
is
74
SASSAFRAS
indigenous to the Western Hemisphere, occurring in
Florida, Virginia, and as far north as Canada. It is found as far west
as Kansas, but is there very scarce. Its occurrence in Brazil is recorded
by Piso, 1658 (511). Sassafras was in medicinal use among the natives of Florida long before Ponce de Leon in 15 12 set foot on the soil
of this peninsula. It is generally stated and believed that the Spaniards
Sassafras
is
in 1538,
first
record of such a discovery in at least two narratives of this expedition that are accessible to us. On the other hand, there seemed to be
sufficient evidence of the fact that the Spaniards gained a knowledge of
sassafras and its medicinal virtues through the French Huguenot emij
occ
Monardes (447)
sassafras
and
of
description
detailed
in 1574, is
from
not
however,
gained,
being
information
its healing virtues, his
consulpersonal
from
but
lands
sassafras
the
in
experience
any actual
to be credited the
first
his
comat
records
government
the
from
and
tation with travelers
mand (239). From Clusius' (153) version of Monardes, 1593 (447).
some
Spain
into
Florida
from
imported
was
it is learned that the drug
overtaken
when
Florida,
in
Spaniards
the
that
years previous to 1574,
unwholesome
and
miasma
to
consequent
diseases
by fevers and other
use
to
Frenchmen
remaining
few
bv
the
advised
drinking water, were
unreasons
(
for
sassafras
French
the
this drug, which was called by
the
whom
from
Indians
the
by
"pavame"
known to Monardes) and
version)
Clusius
(in
Monardes
French obtained their information.
are
as
such
places,
maritime
in
adds that sassafras grows in Florida
harthe
near
plentiful
especially
being
moist,
75
Mexico,
The
in 161 5.
August
introduct
land, Daniel
1871, p. 491) unearthed the following interesting record contained in the Calendars of
State Papers of the Public Record Office
from Virginia,
"(1)
Small Sassafras Rootes to be drawen in the winter and
dryed and none to be medled with in the somer and yt is worthe qo
and better, p. Tonne," etc.
But, still, the exact botanical origin of sassafras was not known
to the writers of the seventeenth century. While they were
well acquainted with the peculiar foliage and the other characteristics
of the
tree, the flowers and the fruit were expressly stated
to be unknown
to such writers as Clusius (153), (Monardes)
(447), 1593, Joh. Bauhinus (47) (1650), and Piso (511) (1658).
76
now
be
recorded.
who named
long pedicels.
Likewise Jean de Laet (368), in the inck
fras of his afore-mentioned book, requests the reader to^insert in the
text that the fruits of this tree were brought to the notice of the author
by a person returning from Novo Belgio, and adds that the fruit does
not differ much in form from the berries of the laurel, although it is
much smaller. It contains a white nut of bitterish taste, divided into
two
parts.
As
The
77
to
Mexico and
Brazil.
Roots, bark, leaves, flowers,
fragrant and spicy. Flavor and smell peculiar, similar to fennel, sweetish subacrid, residing in a volatile oil heavier than water.
The sassafrine, a peculiar
mucus unalterable by alcohol, found chiefly in the twigs and pith, thickens
water, very mild and lubricating, very useful in opthalmia, dysentery, gravel,
catarrh, etc.
yellow, hard, durable, soon loses the smell ; the roots chiefly
exported for use as stimulant, antispasmodic, sudorific, and depurative; the oil
now often substituted ; both useful in rheumatism, cutaneous diseases, secondary
syphilis, typhus fevers, etc.
Once used in dropsy. The Indians use a strong
decoction to purge and clean the body in the spring; we use instead the tea of
the blossoms for a vernal purification of the blood. The powder of the leaves
used to make glutinous gombos. Leaves and buds used to flavor some beers and
Wood
Also deemed vulnerary and resolvent chewed and applied, or menagogue and corroborant for women in tea; useful in scurvy, cachexy, flatulence,
etc.
Bowls and cups made of the wood, when fresh, it drives bugs and moths.
The bark dyes wood of a fine orange color called "shikih" by Missouri tribes,
and smoked like tobacco.
spirits.
SCAMMONIUM
The
dried juice of
method
78
in use, but
natural
gum
beginning of
which probably
(see
its
Scammony is a
home medication.
Manna).
use being
from the
SCILLA
This bulbous plant (Urginea maritima) is broadly distributed
in the islands of the Mediterranean and the countries neighboring, in
the south of Spain and Portugal, and in many instances is found far
inland, even to an elevation as high as three thousand feet above sea
level.
It is one of the most anciently recorded remedies, being mentioned by Epimenides (294), a Greek writer of the seventh century
B. C, who made such use of it that it became known as epimenidea.
Theophrastus (632) mentions it, Pliny (514) notes its two varieties,
Dioscorides (194) describes the making of vinegar of squills, whilst
preparations of squill with honey were familiar remedies in Arabian
medication. The forms employed by the empiricists of those remote
times seem not to have been improved upon by the pharmacy even of
the present day; indeed, attempts to improve the aqueous or acetous
squill simples of ancient home medication by alcoholic extracts and
tinctures, have resulted in failure.
SCOPARIUS
oody
Western
rope, but it seems not to climb to any great height on the mountains
of the Alps. According to Ledebour (375) it is native to the eastern
Scoparius is mentioned in the earliest
side of the Ural Mountains.
Italian and German herbals under the name gcnesta, and under the
jlo-baxon
Myddfai" (507). (See Note, page
The Lon1.)
Welsh "Meddygon
don Pharmacopeia, 1618, gave it a place, and Gerarde (262) states
that Henry VIII used it as a remedy "against surfets and diseases
thereof arising." Broom also enjoyed a reputation in other directions,
for example, being the emblem of "The Handsome" Geoffrey, or
"Plantagenet," Count of Anjou, ancestor of the Plantagenet kings of
England, who wore the common broom of his country, the "planta
genista," in his helmet. Scoparius in the Pharmacopeia of the United
States seems, like other established foreign drugs, to have heired its
reputation and obtained its position from past records in mediaeval
European or Oriental times, instead of from any marked use it has
enjoyed in American medicine.
SCOPOLA
root of this plant, Scopola carniolica, is now official and may
be substituted for belladonna in the making of the mydriatic alkaloids.
Although of recent introduction in scientific pharmacy, it has an interesting botanical record, reaching back to Matthioli (4!4)> who named
The
7
79
'
J.
much
worth mentioning
when
its
many
alkaloidal record
and
its
1900
SCUTELLARIA
Scutellaria lateriflora (skullcap) was in use as a domestic
remedy
before the publication of the first American materia medica,
as shown
80
ployed in that disease, as well as substances other than Scutellaria commended therein. Scutellaria has thus a record both as a secret cure
and as a professional remedy in the treatment of this dreadful disease,
the latter, however, being altogether based upon the domestic use of
the drug. According to Schopf (582), 1785, the plant was used as
a home remedy in the cure of fevers.
SENEGA
Senega, the root of a small North American plant (Poly gala
senega), enjoyed very early a reputation as one of the new remedies
produced by America. The Seneca Indians of New York State employed it as a remedy for the bite of the rattlesnake, which led to
its notoriety in the hands of Tennent, a Scotch physician in Virginia,
who also administered it for coughs. Under the name senega, or rattlesnake root, it came to the attention of Dr. Mead, of London, and
through his efforts and those of others (even Linnaeus [385] writing
a dissertation on it) senega root came into great demand. In domestic
American medicine it has been continually used as an expectorant, the
usual form being that of a syrup.
SENNA
Senna leaves are from two species of cassia, one of which is native
to Nubia and other sections of Africa, while the other abounds in
Yemen and Southern Arabia as well as in some parts of India, where
cultivated for medicinal use. The cultivated plant, originally the
product of Arabian seed, furnishes the leaves known in commerce as
Tinnevelly senna. The drug was introduced into Western Europe by
the Arabians, and in this connection it may be stated that, notwithstanding its present abundance in some parts of Africa, according to
Isaac Judaeus (336a), a native of Egypt, who lived about 850-900
A. D., senna was brought from Mecca to Egypt. In early Arabian
medicine the pods of the senna were preferred to the leaves. Its price
This writer
in France, 1542, was about that of pepper or ginger.
it is
shops selling foods and provisions, as well as in the Oriental bazaars, it being everywhere a familiar domestic cathartic. Its native use introduced the drug to medicine and antedates historical record.
found senna
SERPENTARIA
woodlands
the Allegheny
Johnson
81
SINAPIS
ALBA
SINAPIS NIGRA
Black mustard (Sinapis nigra) is an herb found over the whole
of Europe, excepting the extreme north. It also abounds in Northern
Africa, Asia Minor, the Caucasian region, Western India,
Southern
Siberia, and China, as well as in North and South America,
where it
now
naturalized.
It
of
the
ing
empiricists."
The
to Sinapis nigra.
SPIGELIA
marilandica
.
woods
,.-^v^ of
..
this
tw.c i_^um.ij(.
country.
x uc Indians
The
-inuidus em-
it
at
STAPHISAGRIA
Delphinium staphisagria, a native of waste places of Italy, the
Greek islands, and Asia Minor, is now generally distributed throughout the Mediterranean countries and the adjacent islands, e. g., the
Canaries. It was known to the ancients, being mentioned by Nicander
(581), Dioscorides (194), Pliny (514), and others, the last-named
author stating that the powdered seeds were used for destroying
vermin of the head and body, in which direction it is still popular.
Throughout the Middle Ages the drug continued in use, according to
Pietro Crescenzio (172), of the thirteenth century. The seeds were
collected in Italy, where the plant is still cultivated, being still in demand in domestic medicine as an insecticide.
STILLINGIA
Stillingia sylvatica is native to the pine barrens of the Southern
States of North America, and in the form of an infusion or decoction
of the green drug has been used in domestic medicine as a purgative
and alterative, creeping thence to the attention of physicians of the
Southern States. It was also employed empirically in cutaneous diseases, and as a constituent of various "blood purifiers" used commonly
V
John
torv most positively controverted. Inasmuch as Peter Smith (605)
**
-^-
"Indian Herb Doctor," neglects stillingia in his Dispensatory, while Rafinesque (535) gives it brief mention in his Medical
the
83
parts of the
temperate civilized world. It was found in America, where the settlers near Jamestown, Virginia, used it as a pot herb, the resulting
deaths so advertising it as to create the common name, still in use,
Jamestown or Jimson weed. De Candolle (186) decided that stra-
is
Old World, probably bordering the Caspian Sea, but not of India nor yet of Europe at the time of the clasto the
sical period.
both
ternally.
(See Hyoscyamus.)
STROPHANTHUS
The genus Strophantus, which produces
this drug,
is
chiefly
auem
^^^r
m pv ^
^m ^^
v 9
"
Plants
m
d*
^^a a
^*^
w~#
of the genus have usually woody stems, emitting a milky juice when
wounded, and are generally twining vines. The seed of commerce is
probably collected from various species indiscriminately, which have
been
and differentiated by Pax (495), Planchon (512), Hartwich(304), Holmes (322), Blondel (80), and others. Space will
permit us to mention only the two species which are acknowledged to
be the principal source of the drug.
Strophanthus hispidus, D. C, was one of four species described
by De Candolle as early as 1802, and is the species to which the drug
was first ascribed. Its habitat is Senegambia and Guinea and other
parts of Western Africa. The stem is a twining, milky shrub, with
opposite hirsute leaves.
(Hence the name hispidus, Latin for bristly,
hairy.) The seed, which bears a slender style terminating in a
plumose
pappus consisting of long hairs,* is the part used in medicine.
As stated before, the genus strophanthus was established by De
Candolle as far back as the year 1802.
It was not until the early
sixties, however, that the drug came to the general
notice of Europeans as being one of the arrow poisons used among the African native
tribes, there being two kinds of arrow poisons derived
from this
source. A poison was prepared on the west coast of Africa
(Senegambia. Gu inea, and Gaboon) called inee or onaye, which is
derived
classified
Hartwich
calls
special
^^
&%,
p^cticafptrWses"
*"
84
*"
"
***^tt*Eg
This
is
Strophanthus kombe.
physiological features of the drug as a powerful cardiac were
recognized by the first investigators (Sharpey, 1862; Pelikan, 1865;
Fraser, 1871). Livingstone reports the observation of Consul Kirk
that the poison remarkably reduced the pulse, but the drug was not
authoritatively recognized by the medical profession until about the
note
that
in
Somalito
interesting
is
it
connection
this
In
year 1885.
virulence
of
the
the
establish
to
order
in
native,
the
Africa,
land,
poison, scrapes the skin from his own arm until the blood flows, when
and
watches
pool
bloody
the
end
of
lower
the
to
poison
the
applies
he
Burroughs,
firm
of
the
upward.
To
below
from
effect,
the coagulating
position
that
the
due
largely
is
London
(677-678),
Wellcome & Co.,
day,
this
bepresent
of
the
lore
medical
in
the
Strophanthus occupies
his
through
Wellcome,
Henry
S.
Mr.
of
efforts
ing due chiefly to the
friend, Henry M. Stanley, the African explorer.
The
STYRAX
part
southwestern
the
to
native
tree
a
Styrax is the product of
of
Krinos,
to
According
islands.
of Asia Minor and the adjacent
Aetius
by
made
were
(6)
styrax
to
allusions
Athens, 1862, the earliest
were
physicians
Arabian
earl
The
y
and Paulus ^gineta (494), 1567Russian
The
production.
of
methods
acquainted with styrax and its
his
him
by
found
as
tree
the
Abbott of Tver, 11 13-15, describes
least
early
at
as
China
reached
Styrax
travels through Asia Minor.
China
to
shipped
now
it
is
but
caravans,
as 1368 by means of Arabian
restricted
is
medicine
in
use
Its
by way of the Red Sea and India.
with
combined
diseases,
skin
mainly to an external application in
use.
internal
for
recommended
been
other substances. It has, however,
ompounds
(Not
gned
)
85
official
TAMARINDUS
The tamarind (Tamarindus
indica)
is
handsome
enous to tropical
Africa.
It is also found
and Yemen, and has been naturalized in South America as well as in
adjacent tropical islands, such as the West Indies; also in Mexico
we having gathered it in La Paz, Lower California. The ancient
Greeks and Romans seem not to have known the tamarind. If known
to the Egyptians, it was neglected by their authors,
although Sir
Gardner Wilkinson (688) states that tamarind stones were found in
the tombs of Thebes, a statement not confirmed,
however, by specimens of the contents of tombs in the British Museum. The' ancient
Sanskrit writings mention tamarind, and the fruit was known
to the
Arabians as Indian dates, under which name it was mentioned by earlv
authors, such as Avicenna (30) and others, including Alhervi
(2), o'f
Persia. Credit is given the Arabians for the distribution of
the drug
and its uses, it passing from them, with other Eastern products, into
Europe through the famous school of Salernum. Tamarinds have
been used in their native countries in the making of a cooling
drink
much relished by persons afflicted with fevers, in which direction they
have been also employed in medicine throughout the civilized
world.
It would be better if the modern physician were
more familiar with the
grateful home-made drink that tamarinds afford the parched
sufferer
'
from
fever.
TARAXACUM
The dandelion (Taraxacum
officinale)
is
reputation as a
home remedy.
86
It yet
enjoys a hiffh
Oil of Turpentine.
Resin.
The
many
known by
sticky juice of
coniferous trees,
and other
THYMOL
a product of Thymus vulgaris, a native of Portugal.
Spain, Southern France, Italy, and the mountainous parts of Greece.
It has for several centuries been cultivated in England as a garden
plant, and has long been known to yield a highly aromatic essential
/ thyme, an apothecary
oil.
of Berlin named Neumann, 1725, described this substance, which was
called thymol by Lallemand (369a) in 1853, thus giving a name to
in
domestic
valued
been
had
ever
itself,
in
use
little
in
that,
a substance
medicine as well as by the medical profession in its natural association
orioil
name
the
Under
thyme.
of
of
oil
part
of
and combination as a
ganum, oil of thyme has been a popular product obtained by the distilliniments
domestic
in
ingredient
an
as
used
being
lation of this herb,
even
is
profession
medical
the
by
use
Its
and in veterinary medicine.
yet much limited.
Thymol
is
TRAGACANTHA
m
exactly
locate
To
distributed.
widely
very
the shrub yielding it being
been
ever
It
has
records.
historic
its first use would be to antedate
product
natural
as
a
where
humanity,
cradle
of
before the people in the
87
TRITICUM
Couch
grass,
Agropyron repens,
is
weed widely
diffused
ULMUS
"Slippery elm," Ulmus fulva, is a middle-sized tree found abundantly in the natural woodlands of the Central and Eastern United
States, from Canada to the South.
The Indians and settlers of
North America valued the inner bark of this tree as a poultice; in
certain skin diseases they used it as an external application, and as a
soothing drink in fevers. In bowel affections they employed a cold
decoction. Schopf (582), 1787, refers to it as "salve bark/' An infusion made by digesting the shredded inner bark of slippery elm in
cold water, has (after the teaching of the Indians) ever maintained a
high reputation in domestic North American medication in fevers, and
especially in diarrheas connected therewith.
The mucilaginous qualities render the powdered bark peculiarly adapted to the making of
poultices, in which direction it was known to all the early settlers of
America and was by them introduced to the medical profession.
88
VALERIANA
The herbaceous
perennial Valeriana officinalis is found throughout Europe from Spain to Iceland, extending also from the Crimaea,
over Northern Asia, into China. It not only grows wild, but in England especially is cultivated as a drug plant. It was known to the
Greeks and Romans, and the wild nard described by Dioscorides (194)
and Pliny (514) is supposed to be a species of valerian, of which, in
addition to the Valeriana officinalis, nine species are found in Asia
Minor. The name valerian, however, was not used by the classical
It is found
writers, occurring first in the ninth and tenth centuries.
in the Anglo-Saxon names of home remedies, and in domestic books as
Saladinus (570) of Ascoli, 1450, diearly as the eleventh century.
In medirected that the root be collected in the month of August.
aeval days in England the flavor of valerian was considered by the
common people a delightful addition to broths and pottages, Gerarde
Herball
food
anything without it. Strangely enough also the odor of valerian, now
considered exceedingly disagreeable, was in the sixteenth century accepted as a perfume, and as a perfume it is still used in the Orient.
In this connection we will add that we have known valerian to be a
constituent of a perfume very popular with some ladies, but exceedIn domestic medicine a tea
ingly unpleasant to some other people.
from the root of valerian has been employed as a stimulant and
antispasmodic in nervous diseases peculiar to females.
VANILLA
The conquering Spaniards found vanilla in use as a flavor for
cacao among the Aztecs of Mexico, and naturally made this plant
known to Europe. It was then described and illustrated by Hernandez
dewho
Mexico,
history
of
in
his
Spaniards/'
"Pliny
of
the
the
(314),
7
89
PHARMACOPCEIAL VEGETABLE DRUGS.
under both the botanical name, "aracus aromaticus," and
Clusius (153) mentions it in 1602
its vernacular name, "tlilxochitl."
Pomet (519), in 1694, reports the
as "lobus oblongus aromaticus/'
use of vanilla in France to flavor chocolate and sometimes to perfume
scribed
it
As
early as 1721 vanilla was introduced into the London pharmacopeia, and in 1739 Mr. Ph. Miller (437) planted some vanilla
specimens (vanilla aromatic a, Swartz) in the Chelsea botanical garIn the West Indies and the adjoining coast of South America
den.
vanilla has also long been known.
In 1724 P. Labat (365), a Catholic missionary, reports (from
hear-say) the abundant occurrence of vanilla in the "terre ferme" of
snuff.
j~\
1*51
(*
s*
697
Martinique
for eight years.
He
In 1750
Humboldt (331)
named
Morren
now
an
of the United States, Florida, and Texas.
For a historical treatise
on all the aspects of vanilla and its cultivation see (388) Vanilla planifolia.
VERATRUM VIRIDE
quite a common plant in many parts of the United States,
particularly in the eastern states, where it grows in swampy places, wet
meadows, and along the borders of streams. It is usually well known
This
is
90
m sections where
it is
found,
work.J
conceded by all modern botanists to be a distinct species; it is so close, however, to Veratrum album of Europe
that the early explorers of America and some of the earlier botanists
Veratrum
and travelers
viride
is
Michaux (433)
(Flor. bor. am., Vol. II, p. 249), Jossethought it was the same
lyn (345), Kalm (350), David Schopf (582)
species. Certainly the rhizomes of both plants bear a close resemblance
to each other, even in their microscopical aspects.
(E. S. Baslin, Am.
VIBURNUM OPULUS
High
cranberry,
Viburnum
a shrub growing in
United States. The bark of this shrub was used by the Indians as
a diuretic, a decoction being freely employed. According to Rafinesque
from
this
plant,
and
devised
the
also
were
plasters
pills
and
(535),
bark was smoked, instead of tobacco, by some of the Western Indian
tribes.
The leaves of Viburnum opulus and other species were used
by the Indians as a tea, and also by the settlers of the Southern States
in early Colonial days. The domestic use of viburnum did not impress
the medical profession to any extent until the day of Beach (49), as
is evidenced by the fact that such conspicuous authorities as Zollickoffer (706), and even the United States Dispensatory, 1833 edition,
neglected to mention either the plant or its uses.
is
name
universally
"Aiton,
91
Wm."
New
this tree
first
was
part of
we have observed
John King, M. D.
(35 6 ), 1857, where the drug is described and the statement made that
it acts as a uterine tonic, its uses being
practically those now recorded
m medical literature. In i860 Dr. I. J. M. Goss (New Preparations,
United States.
XANTHOXYLUM
Prickly ash,
Xanthoxylum americanum,
is
a shrub native to
Betherand
mentioned it in print. Long preceding that date, however, a tea of
corn silk had been employed in American domestic practice as a remedy
for acute affections of the bladder. Dr. John Davis, a well-known Cincinnati physician, repeatedly informed the writer that, in his
opinion, a
decoction of corn silk, together with a decoction of dried pods of beans,
was the most effective of all diuretics he had employed in his practice,
92
duced remedy. Many commendatory articles followed this in European medical journals, which fact, together with the increased demand
on American manufacturing pharmacists, led to its introduction into
the Pharmacopeia of the United States.
ZINGIBER
Ginger, Zingiber officinale, is a reed-like plant native to Asia,
but has been introduced to most tropical countries, and grows freely in
some parts of the West Indies, South America, Western Africa.
Australia, etc. It was known to the ancients, being extensively used
by the Greeks and Romans, who considered it an Arabian product
because it came to them, among spices from India, by way of the Red
It was an article of common import from the East to Europe
Sea.
from the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries A. D., and probably for
a long period preceding that time. Ginger was taxed as a spice, in
common with pepper, cloves, galangal, cubebs, etc. It was frequently
named in the Anglo-Saxon domestic works on medicine of the eleventh
century, and was used by the Welsh physicians (507) of the thirteenth
and fourteenth centuries, being then next to pepper in common use.
Marco Polo (518) observed it in China and India about 1280-90. In
fact, ginger has been a spice and a domestic remedy from the earliest
records, being extensively employed both as a spice and as an aroIt is still a popular domestic remedy as well as
matic stomachic.
a favorite with many physicians.
93
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
The
much
(See Introduction.)
But, inas-
now
94
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