Online Encyclopedia

HOUSELEEK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 814 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HOUSELEEK  , Sempervivum, a genus of ornamental

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evergreen
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plants belonging to the natural order
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Crassulaceae . About 30
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species are known in gardens, some of which are hardy perennial herbs, and grow well in dry or rocky situations; the others are evergreen shrubs or undershrubs,
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fit only for cultivation in the greenhouse or conservatory . The genus Sempervivum is distinguished from the nearly allied
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Sedum by having more than five (about 12) petals, and by the glands at the
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base of the ovary being laciniated if
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present . The
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common houseleek, S. tectorum (Ger . Hauswurzel, Fr. joubarbe), is often met with in Britain on
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roofs of outhouses and wall-tops, but is not a native . Originally it was indigenous in the
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Alps, but it is now widely dispersed in
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Europe, and has been introduced into
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America . The leaves are thick, fleshy and succulent, and are arranged in the form of a rosette lying close to the
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soil . The plant propagates itself by offsets on all sides, so that it forms after a time a dense cushion or aggregation of rosettes . The flowering stem, which is of rather rare occurrence, is about i ft. high, reddish, cylindrical and succulent, and ends in a level-topped cyme, re-flexed at the circumference, of reddish flowers, which bloom from
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June to September . The houseleek has been known variously as the houselick, homewort or
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great houseleek . Sedum acre (stone-crop) is styled the little houseleek . In Germany it is sometimes called Donnerkraut, from being supposed to protect the house on which it grows from
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thunder .

The leaves are said to contain malic

acid in considerable quantity, and have been eaten as salad, like Portulaca . S. glutinosum and S. balsamiferum, natives respectively of Madeira and the Canary Islands, contain a very viscou4 substance in large quantity, and are used for the preparation of
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bird-lime; fishermen in Madeira, after dipping their nets in an alkaline solution, rub them with this substance, rendering them as tough as leather . S. montanum, indigenous in Central Europe, according to
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Gmelin, causes violent purging; S. arboreum, rb piya ae4'coov of Dioscorides, is employed in Cyprus, the East, and
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northern Africa as an
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external remedy for malignant ulcers, inflammations and burns, and internally for mucous discharges .

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