Online Encyclopedia

ACORUS CALAMUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 153 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ACORUS CALAMUS  , sweet-sedge or sweet-

flag, a plant of the natural order Araceae, which shares with the
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Cuckoo Pint (Arum) the representation in Britain of that order of Monocotyledons . The name is derived from acorus, Gr. a.KOpoc, the classical name for the plant . It was the Calamus aromalicus of the
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medieval druggists and perhaps of the ancients, though the latter has been referred by some to the Citron grass, Andropogon Nardus . The spice " Calamus " or " Sweet-
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cane " of the Scriptures, one of the ingredients of the
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holy
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anointing oil of the Jews, was perhaps one of the fragrant
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species of Andropogon . The plant is a herbaceous perennial with a long, branched root-stock creeping through the mud, about t inch thick, with short
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joints and large brownish leaf-scars . At the ends of the branches are tufts of flat, sword-like, sweet-scented leaves 3 or 4 ft. long and about an inch wide, closely arranged in two rows as in the true Flag (
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Iris); the tall, flowering stems (stapes), which very much resemble the leaves, bear an apparently lateral, blunt, tapering spike of densely packed, very small flowers . A long leaf (spathe) borne immediately below the spike forms an apparent continuation of the scape, though really a lateral outgrowth from it, the spike of flowers being terminal . The plant has a wide distribution, growing in wet situations in the Himalayas, North
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America,
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Siberia and various parts of
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Europe, including England, and has been naturalized in Scotland and Ireland . Though regarded as a native in most counties of England at the
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present day, where it is now found thoroughly wild on sides of ditches, ponds and rivers, and very abundantly in some districts, it is probably not indigenous . It seems to have been spread in western and central Europe from about the end of the 16th century by means of botanic gardens . The botanist Clusius (Charles de 1'Escluse or Lecluse, 1526-1609) first cultivated it at Vienna from a root received from
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Asia Minor in 1574, and distributed it to other botanists in central and western Europe, and it was probably introduced into England about 1596 by the herbalist Gerard . It is very readily propagated by means of its branching root-stock .

It has an agreeable odour, and has been used medicinally . The starchy

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matter contained in its rhizome is associated with a fragrant oil, and it is used as hair-powder .
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Sir J . E . Smith (Eng .
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Flora, ii . 158, 2nd ed., 1828) mentions it as a popular remedy in Norfolk for ague . In India it is used as an insectifuge, and is administered in infantile diarrhoea . It is an ingredient in pot-pourri, is employed for flavouring
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beer and is chewed to clear the voice; and its volatile oil is employed by makers of snuff and aromatic
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vinegar . The rhizome of Acorus Calamus is sometimes adulterated with that of Iris Pseudacorus, which, however, is distinguishable by its lack of odour, a stringent taste and dark colour .

End of Article: ACORUS CALAMUS
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