| Literature DB >> 31072383 |
Monika Kujawska1, Ingvar Svanberg2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: White bryony, Bryonia alba L., is a relatively little known plant in the history of folk medicine and folk botany in eastern and northern Europe. The main aim of this article is to bring together data about Bryonia alba and to summarise its cultural history and folk botanical importance in eastern and northern Europe. Nowadays, this species is considered at best as an ornamental plant, and at worst as a noxious weed. However, ethnographic and historical sources show that it used to be of magical, medicinal and ritual importance in our part of Europe.Entities:
Keywords: Booklore; Ethnoveterinary practice; Folk medicine; Historical ethnobotany; Ornamental plants; Plant folklore
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31072383 PMCID: PMC6509761 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-019-0303-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Fig. 1Bryonia alba L. (Cucurbitaceae) illustration from Johan Wilhelm Palmstruch, Svensk botanik, (Stockholm1803)
Fig. 2Geographical distribution of Bryonia dioica and B. alba. Adapted from Global Biodiversity Information Facility (gbif.www); Artdatabanken (artfakta.artdatabanken.se); and Volz and Renner in Taxon 58(2); 2009. Map was drawn by Hele Kiimann, Uppsala University
Fig. 3Root and berries of Bryonia alba. Illustration from Eduard Winkler, Sämmtliche Giftgewäckse Deutschlands (Leipzig 1854)
Bryonia alba L.—categories of uses based on historical and ethnographic material
| Category of use | Use [reference] | Region and country |
|---|---|---|
| Folklorea | Blessed in bouquets on Assumption Day [ | South-eastern Poland |
| Folklorea | Blessed in wreaths during Corpus Christi [ | Poland |
| Folklorea | Sepulchral rituals—placed in a coffin, as a “pillow” for a dead person [ | Eastern Poland |
| Folklorea | Apotropaic for people and domestic animals [ | Poland |
| Folklorea | Used by witches to harm people and their cattle [ | Poland |
| Folklorea | Bringing luck plant, endowed with transformative powers [ | Poland |
| Folklorea | Brings luck to the household [ | Southern Russia |
| Folklorea | Digging the plant required putting some offering (bread, coins), in return a spirit who lived inside would not get irritated and seeking revenge [ | Poland, Ukraine |
| Folklorea | Folklore of love and courtship [ | Poland |
| Folklorea | Folklore of love and courtship [ | Lower Rhine, Germany |
| Folklorea | Substitute for mandrake ( | Germany, Poland |
| Folklorea | Substitute for mandrake ( | Denmark |
| Food (emergency) | Starch-rich roots were recommended for baking emergency bread [ | Finland, Sweden |
| Food (poison) | Berries can be highly toxic [ | Croatia |
| Medicinal (folk) | Wounds, ulcers [ | Lithuanian-Belarus borderland |
| Medicinal (folk) | Wounds, mixed with fat against scabies, chest pains (the root, mixed with honey and brandy), fever, rheumatism [ | Romania |
| Medicinal (folk) | Folk illness: | Poland |
| Medicinal (folk) | Epilepsy [ | Denmark |
| Medicinal (folk) | Leaves used in contusion, bruises, bone fracture [ | Lithuania |
| Medicinal (folk) | Internal parasites, abortifacient [ | Ukraine |
| Medicinal (folk) | Constipation [ | Sweden |
| Medicinal (folk) | Viper bites [ | Denmark |
| Medicinal (folk) | Snake bites [ | Romania |
| Medicinal (folk) | Deters snakes [ | Southern Russia |
| Medicinal (folk current use) | purgative, diuretic, mucolytic, against dropsy, gout, lung catarrh, diarrhoea, epilepsy, wounds, ulcers [ | Deliblato Sands, Serbia |
| Medicinal (folk current use) | Anti-rheumatic [ | Kosovo |
| Medicinal (historical) | Oedema, intestinal worms, convulsion, headache, bruises, pneumonia [ | Sweden |
| Medicinal (historical) | Stitches on the side [ | Germany |
| Medicinal (historical) | Stitches on the side [ | Sweden |
| Medicinal (historical) | Epilepsy [ | Sweden |
| Medicinal (historical) | Constipation; used to remove a dead foetus [ | Sweden |
| Medicinal (historical) | Internal parasitic worms, laxative, aches and sores [ | Sweden |
| Medicinal (historical) | Hysterical disorders, inflammation of the hands [ | Sweden |
| Medicinal (historical) | Pneumonia, gout [ | Germany |
| Medicinal (historical) | Laxative and purgative medicine [ | Poland |
| Medicinal (historical) | Dizziness, as heart tonic [ | Poland |
| Ornamental | Good for covering wooden walls, portals and gazebos [ | Sweden |
| Ornamental | Ornamental plant in crofters and peasant gardens during the nineteenth century [ | Sweden |
| Veterinary (folk) | Used to enhance cow milking [ | South-eastern Poland |
| Veterinary (folk) | Blessed on St. George’s Day and used in rituals to increase fatness of the cow’s milk [ | Upper Pčinja, Leskovačka Morava in Serbia |
| Veterinary (folk) | Blessed for Epiphany together with common juniper and used in cow fumigation, when a cow suffered from udder infection [ | Central-western Poland |
| Veterinary (folk) | Given to pigs, cattle and sheep to prevent and cure several illnesses [ | Romania |
| Veterinary (folk) | Given to domestic hogs for parasitic worms and anthrax; pigs’ prophylaxis [ | Denmark |
| Veterinary (folk) | Goats’ treatment (unspecific) [ | Sweden |
| Veterinary (folk) | Peasants often grew it close to henhouses as it could keep away birds of prey [ | Scandinavia |
aFolklore means here folk beliefs and ritual use