Artemisia Absinthium
(Absinthe, Wormwood)
Wormwood has had many useful medical
applications. In fact, the first known
mention of wormwood is in the Ebers papyrus,
a medical document dating to 1550 B.C. The
Egyptians and many later cultures used it as
a vermifuge, and the name "wormwood" may
refer to this property of ridding the body
of worms. It was also thought to prevent the
plague.
The foliage was smoked by some American
Indian tribes, inducing visionary states
during religious ceremonies.
Russian peasants thought that wormwood's
bitter taste was because of the herb's
"absorption of bitter human suffering."
Wormwood is best known as the primary
ingredient in absinthe. Absinthe enjoyed
some popularity as well as some controversy
in the mid 19th century. It was thought to
inhance creativity. Celebrated absinthe
drinkers included the painters Lautrec,
Gauguin, Manet, Van Gogh and Picasso, along
with the writers Rimbaud, Verlaine, Oscar
Wilde, Edgar Allen Poe and Jack London.
Absinthe
is the main source of wormwood's notoriety.
There is simply no other beverage which has
been surrounded by so much mystique and
ceremony. Its mystique is of course helped
by the fact that the liqueur has been banned
in most countries since the early part of
this century.
Absinthe remains controversial today. The
psychoactive principles are not well
understood.
The seeds are easy to grow and bloom into an
attractive, silvery plant. Worm wood
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