Smilacina racemosa

Smilacina racemosa Desf. syn. Maianthemum racemosum (L.)Link Convallariaceae. False Spikenard, False Solomon's Seal, Scurvy berries, Treacle berries. Herbaceous perennial. Distribution: North America. Probably introduced to England by John Tradescant the Younger in 1656 as it appears in his gar...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://wellcomeimages.org/ixbin/hixclient.exe?MIROPAC=B0009201
id ftwellcome:oai:wellcomeimages.org:record/B0009201
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwellcome:oai:wellcomeimages.org:record/B0009201 2023-05-15T12:58:53+02:00 Smilacina racemosa April 2009 http://wellcomeimages.org/ixbin/hixclient.exe?MIROPAC=B0009201 unknown http://wellcomeimages.org/ixbin/hixclient.exe?MIROPAC=B0009201 B0009201 Dr Henry Oakeley, Wellcome Images Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons by-nc-nd 4.0, see http://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/page/Prices.html CC-BY-NC-ND B0009201 Countryside Garden Green Herbal remedies Petal Poison Flowers Plants Medicinal Nature Herbal Medicine Plant Preparations Plant Leaves Toxic Photograph 2009 ftwellcome 2014-12-20T11:27:49Z Smilacina racemosa Desf. syn. Maianthemum racemosum (L.)Link Convallariaceae. False Spikenard, False Solomon's Seal, Scurvy berries, Treacle berries. Herbaceous perennial. Distribution: North America. Probably introduced to England by John Tradescant the Younger in 1656 as it appears in his garden plant catalogue in Musaeum Tradescantianum in 1656. Austin (2004) reports on Native American traditional usage: a cold infusion of the roots was used for sore eyes (Cherokee) to stop bleeding of the lungs (Abenaki) and as an Infusion to wash back sores (Algonquin). Used after miscarriages, to kill tapeworms, to counteract poison, for rheumatism, externally on sore feet, and for snakebite (Iroquois) as an infusion for rashes and itch (Malecite and Micmac). Cough mixture (Mohegan). Poultice from roots for cuts, back pain, headaches, sore throat (Ojibwa). Revive comatose patients (Potawatomi). Eaten as potato after soaking in lye, parboiling and cooking (Ojibwa). Taste of treacle when ripe, but cathartic – eat with caution. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London. Still Image abenaki Malecite Wellcome Trust, London: Wellcome Images Austin
institution Open Polar
collection Wellcome Trust, London: Wellcome Images
op_collection_id ftwellcome
language unknown
topic Countryside
Garden
Green
Herbal remedies
Petal
Poison
Flowers
Plants
Medicinal
Nature
Herbal Medicine
Plant Preparations
Plant Leaves
Toxic
spellingShingle Countryside
Garden
Green
Herbal remedies
Petal
Poison
Flowers
Plants
Medicinal
Nature
Herbal Medicine
Plant Preparations
Plant Leaves
Toxic
Smilacina racemosa
topic_facet Countryside
Garden
Green
Herbal remedies
Petal
Poison
Flowers
Plants
Medicinal
Nature
Herbal Medicine
Plant Preparations
Plant Leaves
Toxic
description Smilacina racemosa Desf. syn. Maianthemum racemosum (L.)Link Convallariaceae. False Spikenard, False Solomon's Seal, Scurvy berries, Treacle berries. Herbaceous perennial. Distribution: North America. Probably introduced to England by John Tradescant the Younger in 1656 as it appears in his garden plant catalogue in Musaeum Tradescantianum in 1656. Austin (2004) reports on Native American traditional usage: a cold infusion of the roots was used for sore eyes (Cherokee) to stop bleeding of the lungs (Abenaki) and as an Infusion to wash back sores (Algonquin). Used after miscarriages, to kill tapeworms, to counteract poison, for rheumatism, externally on sore feet, and for snakebite (Iroquois) as an infusion for rashes and itch (Malecite and Micmac). Cough mixture (Mohegan). Poultice from roots for cuts, back pain, headaches, sore throat (Ojibwa). Revive comatose patients (Potawatomi). Eaten as potato after soaking in lye, parboiling and cooking (Ojibwa). Taste of treacle when ripe, but cathartic – eat with caution. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
format Still Image
title Smilacina racemosa
title_short Smilacina racemosa
title_full Smilacina racemosa
title_fullStr Smilacina racemosa
title_full_unstemmed Smilacina racemosa
title_sort smilacina racemosa
publishDate 2009
url http://wellcomeimages.org/ixbin/hixclient.exe?MIROPAC=B0009201
geographic Austin
geographic_facet Austin
genre abenaki
Malecite
genre_facet abenaki
Malecite
op_source B0009201
op_relation http://wellcomeimages.org/ixbin/hixclient.exe?MIROPAC=B0009201
B0009201
op_rights Dr Henry Oakeley, Wellcome Images
Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons by-nc-nd 4.0, see http://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/page/Prices.html
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
_version_ 1766291634807373824