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CHESTNUT (nux Castanea)

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 113 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHESTNUT (nux Castanea)  , the
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common name given to two sorts of trees and their fruit, (1) the so-called " horse-chestnut," and (2) the sweet or "
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Spanish " chestnut . (1) The common horse-chestnut, Aesculus Hippocastanum (Ger . Rosskastanie; Fr. marronnier d' Inde), has been stated to be a native of Tibet, and to have been brought thence to England in 155o; it is now, however, thought to be indigenous in the mountains of
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northern
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Greece, where it occurs wild at 3000 to 4000 ft. above sea-level . Matthiolus, who attributes the origin of the name of the tree to the use of the nuts by the inhabitants of Constantinople for the
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relief of short-windedness and cough in horses, remarks that no ancient writer appears to have made mention of the horse-chestnut . Clusius (Rariorum plantarum Kist. i. p . 8, 16o1) describes it as a
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vegetable curiosity, of which in 1588 he had
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left in Vienna a living specimen, but of which he had not yet seen either the flowers or
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recent fruit . The dry fruit, he says, had frequently been brought from Constantinople into
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Europe . The tree grows rapidly; it flourishes best in a sandy, somewhat moist loam, and attains a height of 5o to 6o or more ft., assuming a pyramidal outline . Its boughs are strong and spreading . The buds, conspicuous for their
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size, are protected by a coat of a glutinous substance, which is impervious to
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water; in spring this melts, and the bud-scales are then cast off . The leaves are composed of seven radiating leaflets (long-wedge-shaped); when young they are downy and drooping . From the early date of its leafing
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year by year, a horse-chestnut in the Tuileries is known as the " Marronnier du 20 mars." The flowers of the horse-chestnut, which are white dashed with red and yellow, appear in May, and sometimes, but quite exceptionally, again in autumn; they form a handsome erect panicle, but comparatively few of them afford mature fruit .

The fruit is ripe in or shortly before the first

week in
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October, when it falls to the ground, and the three-valved thorny capsule divides, disclosing the brown and at first beautifully glossy seeds, the so-called nuts, having a resemblance to sweet chestnuts, and commonly three or else two in number . For
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propagation of the tree, the seeds may be sown either when fresh, or, if preserved in sand or earth, in spring . Drying by exposure to the air for a month has been found to prevent their germination . Rooks are wont to remove the nutsfrom the tree just before they fall, and to disperse them in various directions . The tree is rarely planted in mixed plantations where profit is an
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object; it interferes with its neighbours and occupies too much
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room . It is generally introduced near mansion-houses for ornament and shade, and the celebrated avenues at Richmond and Bushey Park in England are
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objects of
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great beauty at the time of flowering . The bark of the horse-chestnut contains a greenish oil, resin, a yellow
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body, a tannin, C26H24O12, existing likewise in the seeds and various parts of the tree, and decomposable into phloroglucin and aesciglyoxalic acid, C7H603, also aesculetin
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hydrate, and the crystalline fluorescent compound aesculin, of the formulaC21H,4013 (Rochleder and Schwarz), with which occurs a similar substance fraxin, the paviin of
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Sir G . G . Stokes (Q . J . Chem .
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Soc. xi .

17, 1859; xii . 126, 186o), who suggests that its presence may perhaps

account for the discrepancies in the analyses of aesculin given by different authors . From the seeds have been obtained
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starch (about 14%), gum, mucilage, a non-drying oil, phosphoric acid, salts of calcium, saponin, by boiling which with dilute hydrochloric or sulphuric acid aesculic acid is obtained, quercitrin,
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present also in the fully
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developed leaves, aescigenin, C12H26O2, and aesculetin, C9H6O4, which is procurable also, but in small quantity only, from the bark . Friedrich Rochleder has described as constituent principles of the cotyledons aphrodaescin, C52H32O23, a bitter
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glucoside, argyraescin, C27H42O12, aescinic acid, C24H40O12, and queraescitrin, C41H46025, found also in the leaves . To prepare pure starch from the seeds, Flandin (Comet. rend.
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xxvii . 391, 1848;
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xxviii . 138, 1849) recommends kneading them, when peeled and bruised, in an aqueous solution of Alf to 6 of their
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weight of sodium carbonate . E . Staffel (
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Ann. d . Chem. u . Pharm. lxxvi., 185o, p . 379) after drying found, in spring and autumn respectively, 10.9 and 3.38% of ash in the wood, 8.68 and 6.57 in the bark, and 7.68 and 7.52 in the leaves of the horse-chestnut .

The ash of the unripe fruit contains 58.77, that of the ripe

kernel 61.74, and that of the green shell 75'91% of potash (E . Wolff) . The wood of the horse-chestnut is soft, and serves only for the making of water-pipes, for turner's
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work and common
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carpentry, as a source of
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charcoal for
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gunpowder, and as fuel . Newly cut it weighs 6o lb, and dry 35 lb per cub. ft. approximately . The bark has been employed for dyeing yellow and for tanning, and was formerly in popular repute as a febrifuge and tonic . The powder of the dried nuts was at one time prescribed as a sternutatory (to encourage sneezing) in the
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Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia . It is stated to form with
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alum-water a size or cement highly offensive to vermin, and with two parts of wheaten
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flour the material for a strong bookbinder's paste . Infusion of horse-chestnuts is found to expel
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worms from
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soil, and soon to kill them if they are left in it . The nuts furthermore have been applied to the manufacture of an oil for burning, cosmetic preparations and starch, and in
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Switzerland, France and Ireland, when rasped on ground, to the
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bleaching of
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flax, hemp,
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silk and wool . In Geneva horse-chestnuts are largely consumed by grazing stock, a single sheep receiving 2 lb. crushed
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morning and evening . Given to cows in moderate quantity, they have been found to enhance both the yield and flavour of milk . Deer readily eat them, and, after a preliminary steeping in lime-water, pigs also .

For poultry they should be used boiled, and mixed with other nourishment . The fallen leaves are relished by sheep and deer, and afford a

good litter for flocks and herds . One variety of the horse-chestnut has variegated leaves, and another double flowers . Darwin observed that Ae . Pavia, the red buckeye of North
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America., shows a
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special tendency, under unfavourable conditions, to be double-blossomed . The seeds of this
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species are used to stupefy fish . The
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scarlet-flowered horse-chestnut, Ae. rubicunda, is a handsome tree, less in height and having a rounder head than the common form; it is a native of North America . Another species, possessing flowers with the
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lower petals white with a red tinge, and the upper yellow and red with a white border, and fruit unarmed, is Ae. indica, a native of the western Himalayas . Among the North
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American species are the. foetid or
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Ohio buckeye, Ae. glabra, and Ae. ftava, the sweet buckeye . Ae. californica, when full-grown and in flower, is a beautiful tree, but its leaves often fall before midsummer . (2) The Spanish or sweet chestnut, Castanea sativa (natural order, Fagaceae), is a stately and magnificent tree, native of the countries bordering on the Mediterranean, but also ripening its fruit in sheltered situations as far north as Scotland . It lives very long, and attains a large size, spreading its branches widely .

It has large glossy lanceolate leaves with a toothed margin . The flowers, which appear in early summer, are in pendulous, slender yellowish catkins, which

bear a number of staminate flowers with a few pistillate flowers at the
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base . The staminate contain 8 to 20 stamens which produce an enormous amount of dusty yellow pollen, some of which gets carried by wind to the protruding stigmas of the pistillate flowers . The latter are borne three together, invested by a cupule of four green bracts, which, as the fruit matures, grow to form the tough green prickly envelope surrounding the
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group of generally three nuts . The largest known chestnut tree is the famous Castagno di cento cavalli, or the chestnut of a
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hundred horses, on the slopes of Mount Etna, a tree which, when measured about 178o by Count Borch, was found to have a circumference of 190 ft . The
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timber bears a striking resemblance to that of the oak, which has been mistaken for chestnut; but it may be distinguished by the numerous
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fine medullary rays . Unlike oak, the wood is more valuable while young than old . When not more than fifty years old it forms durable posts for fences and gates; but at that age it often begins to deteriorate, having ring-shakes and central hollows . In a young state, when the stems are not above 2 in. in diameter at the ground, the chestnut is found to make durable hoops for casks and props for vines; and of a larger size it makes good hop-poles . Chestnuts (the fruit of the tree) are extensively imported into Great Britain, and are eaten roasted or boiled, and mashed or otherwise as a vegetable . In a raw state they have a sweet taste, but are difficult of digestion . The trees are very abundant in the south of Europe, and chestnuts bulk largely in the food resources of the poor in Spain, Italy, Switzerland and Germany .

In Italy the kernels are ground into

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meal, and used for thickening soups, and even for
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bread-making . In North America the fruits of an allied species, C. americana, are eaten both raw and cooked .

End of Article: CHESTNUT (nux Castanea)
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GILBERT KEITH CHESTERTON (1874- )
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HENRY CHETTLE (1564?–16o7?)

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