Käännettävä myöhemmin:
Vesalius. 2012 Dec;18(2):99-106.
The Doctrine of Signatures, Materia Medica of Orchids, and the Contributions of Doctor - Orchidologists.
Pearn J1.
Abstract
The
heritage of medicine is written in many forms. One repository is to be
found in the history of orchids, the world's largest family of flowering
plants. Orchids were so named by Theophrastus (c.372-288 BC) who
recorded their medicinal use as an aphrodisiac
and the promoter of virility, in the context of the Doctrine of
Signatures. Such use endured for millennia, and was recorded both by
Paracelsus (1493-1551) and Linnaeus (1707-1778). The history of
orchidology and medicine are entwined in four domains: (a) orchids and
their historical materia medica, within the paradigm of the Doctrine of
Signatures; (b) the enduring and extensive contemporary medicinal and
culinary use of orchids such as Vanilla and salep
extracts of Orchis; (c) the scientific contributions of doctors as
orchidologists; and (d) the heritage of more than a hundred doctors'
names in the scientific etymology of the Orchidaceae family. Prominent
orchidologists have included the Scottish doctor-soldier and botanist,
Robert Brown (1773-1858); the Director of the State Herbarium at Leyden
and the Rijks Museum, Carl Ludwig Blume (1796-1862); and Dr William
Sterling MD (1888-1967). Among the more than 1250 genus names (and
33,000 species) of orchids are the names of more than a hundred doctors,
their lives and works perpetuated in the scientific etymology of this
family of exotic, beautiful, flamboyant, intriguing and often expensive
flowers. Generic names record the lives and works of such as Aristotle
(384-322BC) in Aristotelia Loureiro 1790; Cadet de Gassicourt
(1769-1821) in Cadetia Gaudichaud 1826; Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker
(1817-1911) in Sirhookera O. Kuntze 1891; and Dr Theodore Daniel Vrydag
Zynen (fl. 1820-1850) in Vrydagzynea Blume 1858. One of the principal
horticultural genera of orchids, Brassavola, records the life and work
of the Ferrara and Padua physician and botanist, Antonio Musa Brassavola
(1500-1555). The first Slipper Orchid bred as a hybrid, Paphiopedilum
harrisianum (by John Dominy [1816-1892], at Exeter in England) was named
after his colleague, the Devon surgeon, Dr John Harris (1782-1855).
- PMID:
- 26255391
- [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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