Online Encyclopedia

CHAMOMILE, or CAMOMILE FLOWERS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 827 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHAMOMILE, or CAMOMILE FLOWERS  , the flares anthemidis of the
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British Pharmacopoeia, the flower-heads of Anthemis nobilis (Nat . Ord .
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Compositae), a herb indigenous to England and western
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Europe . It is cultivated for medicinal purposes in Surrey, at several places in Saxony, and in France and Belgium,—that grown in England being much more valuable than any of the
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foreign chamomiles brought into the market . In the wild plant the florets of the ray are ligulate and white, and contain pistils only, those of the disk being tubular and yellow; but under cultivation the whole of the florets tend to become ligulate and white, in which state the flower-heads are said to be double . The flower-heads have a warm aromatic odour, which is characteristic of the entire plant, and a very bitter taste . In addition to a bitter extractive principle, they yield about 2 % of a volatile liquid, which on its first extraction is of a pale blue colour, but becomes a yellowish brown on exposure to
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light . It has the characteristic odour of the flowers, and consists of a mixture of butyl and amyl angelates and valerates . Angelate of potassium has been obtained by treatment of the oil with caustic potash, and angelic acid may be isolated from this by treatment with dilute sulphuric acid . Chamomile is used in
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medicine in the form of its volatile oil, of which the dose is 1-3 minims . There is an official extract which is never used . Like all volatile oils the drug is a stomachic and carminative .

In large doses the infusion is a

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simple emetic . Wild chamomile is Matricaria Chamomilla, a weed
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common in waste and cultivated ground especially in the
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southern counties of England . It has somewhat the appearance of true chamomile, but a fainter
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scent .

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