Online Encyclopedia

FENNEL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 256 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FENNEL  , Foeniculum vulgare (also known as F. capillaceum), a perennial plant of the natural

order
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Umbelliferae, from 2 to 3 or (when cultivated) 4 ft. in height, having leaves three or four times pinnate, 'with numerous linear or awl-shaped segments, and glaucous compound umbels of about 15 or 20 rays, with no involucres, and small yellow flowers, the petals incurved at the tip . The fruit is laterally compressed, five-ridged, and has a large single resin-canal or " vitta " under each furrow . The plant appears to be of south
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European origin, but is now met with in various parts of Britain and the rest of temperate
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Europe, and in the west of
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Asia . The dried fruits of cultivated
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plants from Malta have an aromatic taste, and odour, and are used for the preparation of fennel
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water, valued for its carminative properties . It is given in doses of i to 2 oz., the active principle being a volatile oil which is probably the same as oil of anise . The shoots of fennel are eaten blanched, and the seeds are used for flavouring . The fennel seeds of commerce are of several sorts . Sweet or
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Roman fennel seeds are the produce of a tall perennial plant, with umbels of 25-30 rays, which is cultivated near Nismes in the south of France; they are elliptical and arched in form, about * in. long and a quarter as broad, and are smooth externally, and of a colour approaching a pale green . Shorter and straighter fruits are obtained from the
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annual variety of F. vulgare known as F . Panmorium (Panmuhuri) or
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Indian fennel, and are employed in India in curries, and for medicinal purposes . Other kinds are the German or Saxon fruits, brownish-green in colour, and between - and ) in. in length, and the broader but smaller fruits of the wild or bitter fennel of the south of France . A variety of fennel, F. duke, having the stem compressed at the
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base, and the umbel 6-8 rayed, is grown in kitchen-gardens for the
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sake of its leaves .

Giant fennel is the name applied to the plant Ferula communis, a member of the same natural order, and a
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fine herbaceous plant, native in the Mediterranean region, where the pith of the stem is used as tinder . Hog's or sow fennel is the
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species Peucedanum officinale, another member of the Umbelliferae .

End of Article: FENNEL
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DUDLEY FENNER (c. 1558-1587)

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