# # Identification: # # * Title: "Petersen's belladonna" # * Page: f1v = AB (Rene) = p002 (Stolfi) # * Folio: f1 # * Panels: f1v # * Bifolio: bA1 = f1+f8 # * Quire: A (Rene) = I (Beinecke) # # Attributes: # # * Language: A (Currier) # * Hand: 1 (Currier) # * Subsets: H (Rene), hea (Stolfi) # * Subject: herbal # * Colors: green,tan (Reeds), green,faded_yellow (Rene) # * Plant: 1 (Petersen) # # Description: # # There is one plant drawing, centered on page. # # * Root: a knobby, warped, pancanke-like tuber with # short roots attached like claws or fangs # all around the rim. Light color. # * Stem: thick, well drawn. Light color. # * Branches: one straight up, two oblique with drooping tips. # * Leaves: broad lance-shape, with two short tails. # Stalk: short. # * Flowers: one, growing at the tip of the center branch. # Stalk: very short. Chalyx: # conical, continuous with petals. Petals: short rounded, # light-colored. Core: hemispherical, dark-colored # (could be a berry; see below). # # Tere are two paragraphs (unit µ{P}) with 3.8 and 5.8 lines, just # below mid-page, left- and right-justified, interrupted by the # plant's main stem. # # Comments: # # Part of this drawing (root and leaves only) is repeated on # Pharma page f102r1[3,2]. # # The plant looks basically normal, except for the very peculiar # root. # # Petersen identifies the plant as "Solanum Solatrium, Belladonna" # specifically the "flower". He says: "see L.Fuchs p.398". There is # no ¶{Solanum:solatrium}; rather, "solatrium" is an ancient # (Dioscoridean) name for some or all of these species: # # ¶{Atropa:Belladona} (deadly nightshade) # ¶{Hyoscyamus:niger} (henbane) # ¶{Solanum:nigrum} (black nightshade) # ¶{Solanum:dulcamara} (bittersweet) # # and perhaps other somewhat less likely species such as # ¶{Withania:somnifera} and ¶{Physalis:alkekengi}. # # The leaves of f1v seem most compatible those of # ¶{Atropa:belladonna} (shape) and ¶{Hyoscyamus:niger} (attachment # to stem), and the "flower" at the top of f1v does resemble the # sheathed, shiny black fruits of these two species. # # However, ¶{Atropa:beladonna}'s root has been described as a roundish # rhizome with a long (up to 1m) tapering root, which does not seem # to match the highly distinctive "pancake with claws" of f1v. I # have found no image or description of the other plants' roots. # # A very similar root, with quite different leaves, can be seen on # another Italian herbal [1]: The medieval text calls that plant # "Gran[i]a maggiore". The modern commentary tentatively identifies # it with ¶{Ecballium:elaterium} (Squirting Cucumber) I have found # no image or description of ¶{Ecballium:elaterium}'s roots. # # All four plants are poisonous in varying degrees. The active # principles can be absorbed by smoking or through the skin as well # as by ingestion. They were used as potent psychoactive drugs, # causing paralysis of involuntary muscles, dizziness, sleep, # hallucinations, violent behavior, etc., and have been often # associated with witchcraft. # # References: # # [1] University of Vermont Library MS 2, fol. 39 (ca. 1500) # http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/biomed/his/immi/vm9437.htm # # Last edited on 1999-04-15 03:58:28 by stolfi