Artemisia absinthium L.
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Artemisia absinthium

Family: ASTERACEAE
Genus: Artemisia
Species: absinthium L.
Common names: Wormwood
Pharmacopoeia Londinensis name: Absinthium vulgare
Distribution summary: Europe, N.Africa, Asia
Habit: Shrub
Hardiness: H5 - Hardy; cold winter
Habitat: Scrub and waste land
Garden status: Currently grown
Garden location: Europe & Mediterranean (E)
Flowering months: July, August, September
Reason for growing: Medicinal
British Native: Yes

Additional Notes

Ingredient of absinthe, favoured by C19th artists incl. Vincent van Gogh

Wink, Michael & Ben-Erik van Wyk (2008). Mind-Altering and Poisonous Plants of the World. Timber Press

– Common absinthe, Old Man, Lad’s Love, Wormwood

Oakeley, Dr. H. F. . (2013). The Gardens of the Pharmacopoeia Londinensis. Link

Culpeper: ‘... help weakness of the stomach, clense Choller, kill worms, open Stoppings, help surfets, cleer the sight, resist poisons, clense the blood and secure cloaths from moths.’

Culpeper, Nicholas. (1650). A Physical Directory . London, Peter Cole.

Notes: Used in the manufacture of the liqueur, absinthe, but it is said to be toxic – causing brain damage - and its use has been banned in many countries. Whether the hallucinations and brain damage of heavy absinthe drinkers are any different from those of all other alcoholics is still contested. The oil was used as a moth and insect repellent. It contains santonin, previously used as a vermifuge before less toxic treatments were known. It has been used as an abortifacient and a contraceptive, but its main use in Roman times – and in present day Pompei – is for colitis.

Oakeley, Dr. H. F. . (2013). The Gardens of the Pharmacopoeia Londinensis. Link

Artemisia: after the Greek goddess Artemis who so benefitted from a plant of this family that she gave it her own name. This was also the old Latin name given to the mugwort or wormwoods. An alternative possibility for the derivation of this name is that it comes from Queen Artemisia of Halicarnassus in Asia Minor (Turkey), sister and wife of King Mausolus, who ruled after his death from 352 to 350 B.C.E. and built during her short reign one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, which she unfortunately did not live to see the completion of. This is one of the many genera which Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus published in his Species Plantarum in 1753 and is in the family Asteraceae

http://www.calflora.net/southafrica/1A-B.html

Contains thujone, which means the plant is toxic if ingested in large amounts.

Professor Anthony Dayan, 2021

Africa, Northern Africa, Algeria

Africa, Northern Africa, Morocco

Asia-Temperate, Western Asia, Afghanistan

Asia-Temperate, Western Asia, Iran

Asia-Temperate, Western Asia, Turkey

Europe, Eastern Europe, Baltic States

Europe, Southwestern Europe, France

Europe, Southwestern Europe, Portugal

Europe, Southwestern Europe, Spain

Europe, Southeastern Europe, Albania

Europe, Southeastern Europe, Yugoslavia

Europe, Southeastern Europe, Greece

Europe, Southeastern Europe, Italy

Europe, Southeastern Europe, Bulgaria

Europe, Eastern Europe, Baltic States

Europe, Middle Europe, Switzerland

Europe, Eastern Europe, Belarus

Europe, Eastern Europe, Baltic States

Europe, Eastern Europe, Ukraine

Europe, Eastern Europe, Central European Russia

Europe, Eastern Europe, East European Russia

Europe, Northern Europe, Great Britain

Europe, Middle Europe, Austria

Europe, Middle Europe, Germany

Europe, Middle Europe, Netherlands

Europe, Middle Europe, Belgium

Europe, Middle Europe, Poland

Asia-Tropical, Indian Subcontinent, India

Europe, Northern Europe, Denmark

Europe, Northern Europe, Finland

Europe, Northern Europe, Ireland

Europe, Northern Europe, Norway

Europe, Northern Europe, Sweden

Northern America, Southeastern U.S.A., Georgia

Asia-Temperate, Siberia

Asia-Temperate, Middle Asia, Kazakhstan

Asia-Temperate, Middle Asia, Kyrgyzstan

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Asia-Temperate, Middle Asia, Turkmenistan

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