Online Encyclopedia

JUNIPER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 557 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

JUNIPER  . The junipers, of which there are twenty-five or more

See also:
species, are
See also:
evergreen bushy shrubs or low columnar trees, with a more or less aromatic odour, inhabiting the whole of the cold and temperate
See also:
northern hemisphere, but attaining their maximum development in the Mediterranean region, the North
See also:
Atlantic islands, and the eastern
See also:
United States . The leaves are usually articulated at the
See also:
base, spreading, sharp-pointed and needle-like in form, destitute of oil-glands, and arranged in alternating whorls of three; but in some the leaves are minute and scale-like, closely adhering to the branches, the
See also:
apex only being
See also:
free, and furnished with an oil-gland on the back . Sometimes the same plant produces both kinds of leaves on different branches, or the young
See also:
plants produce acicular leaves, while those of the older plants are squamiform . The male and
See also:
female flowers are usually produced on
See also:
separate plants . The male flowers are
See also:
developed at the ends of short lateral branches, are rounded or oblong in form, and consist of several antheriferous scales in two or three rows, each scale; bearing three or six almost spherical pollen-sacs on its under side . The female flower is a small bud-like cone situated at the apex of a small branch, and consists of two or three whorls of two or three scales . The scales of the upper or
See also:
middle series each bear one or two erect ovules . The mature cone is fleshy, with the succulent scales fused together and forming the fruit-like structure known to the older botanists as the galbulus, or berry of the juniper . The berries are red or
See also:
purple in colour, varying in
See also:
size from that of a
See also:
pea to a nut . They thus differ considerably from the cones of other members of the order Coniferae, of
See also:
Gymnosperms (q.v.), to which the junipers belong . The seeds are usually three in number, sometimes fewer (r), rarely more (8), and have the
See also:
surface near the middle or base marked with large glands containing oil .

The genus, occurs in a fossil

state, four species having been described from rocks of
See also:
Tertiary age . The genus is divided into three sections, Sabina, Oxycedrus and Caryocedrus . Juniperus Sabina is the savin, abundant on the mountains of central
See also:
Europe, an irregularly spreading much-branched
See also:
shrub with scale-like glandular leaves, and emitting a disagreeable odour when bruised . The plant is poisonous, acting as a powerful
See also:
local and general stimulant, diaphoretic, emmenagogue and anthelmintic; it was formerly employed both internally and externally . The oil of savin is now occasionally used criminally as an abortifacient . J. bermudiana, a tree about 40 or 50 ft. in height, yields a fragrant red wood, which was used for the manufacture of " cedar " pencils . The tree is now very scarce in Bermuda, and the " red cedar," J. virginiana, of North
See also:
America is employed instead for pencils and
See also:
cigar-boxes . The red cedar is abundant in some parts of the United States and in Virginia is a tree 50 ft. in height . It is very widely distributed from the
See also:
Great Lakes to
See also:
Florida and round the Gulf of Mexico, and extends as far west as the Rocky Mountains and beyond to Vancouver Island . The wood is applied to many uses in the United States . The
See also:
fine red fragrant heart-wood takes a high
See also:
polish, and is much used in
See also:
cabinet-
See also:
work and
See also:
inlaying, but the small size of the planks prevents its more extended use . The
See also:
galls produced at the ends of the branches have been used in
See also:
medicine, and the wood yields cedar-camphor and oil of cedar-wood .

J. thurifera is the

See also:
incense juniper of Spain and
See also:
Portugal, and J. phoenicea (J.
See also:
lycia) from the Mediterranean
See also:
district is stated by Loudon to be burned as incense . J. communis, the
See also:
common juniper (see fig.), and several other species, belong to the section Oxycedrus . The common juniper is a very widely distributed plant, occurring in the whole of northern Europe, central and northern
See also:
Asia to
See also:
Kamchatka, and east and west North America . It grows at considerable elevations in
See also:
southern Europe, in the
See also:
Alps, Apennines, Pyrenees and Sierra Nevada (4000 to 8000 ft.) . It also grows in Asia Minor,
See also:
Persia, and at great elevations on the Himalayas . In Great Britain it is usually a shrub with spreading branches, less frequently a low tree . In former times the juniper seems to have been a very well-known plant, the name occurring almost unaltered in many
See also:
languages . The
See also:
Lat. juniperus, probably formed from juni—crude form of juvenis, fresh, young, and parere, to produce, ig represented by Fr. genievre, Sp. enebro, Ital. ginepile, &c . The dialectical names, chiefly in
See also:
European languages, were collected by Prince L . L .
See also:
Bonaparte, and published in the Academy (
See also:
July 17, 188o, No . 428, p .

45) . The common juniper is

official in the
See also:
British pharmacopoeia and in that of the United States, yielding the oil of juniper, a powerful diuretic, distilled from the unripe fruits . This oil is closely allied in composition to oil of turpentine and is given in doses of a
See also:
half to three minims . The Spiritus juniperi of the British pharma- 557 copoeia is given in doses up to one drachm . Much safer and more powerful diuretics are now in use . The wood is very aromatic and is used for ornamental purposes . In Lapland the hark is made into ropes . The fruits are used for flavouring
See also:
gin (a name derived from juniper, through Fr. genievre); and in some parts of France a kind of
See also:
beer called genevrette was made from them by the peasants . J . Oxycedrus, from the Mediterranean district and Madeira, yields cedar-oil which is official in most of the European pharmacopoeias, but not in that of Britain . This oil is largely used by microscopists in what is known as the " oil-immersion lens." The third section, Caryocedrus, consists of a single species, J. drupacea of Asia Minor . The fruits are large and edible: they are known in the East by the name habhel .

(From

Bentley and Trimen's Medicinal Plants, by permission of J . & A . Churchill.) Juniper (Juniperus communis) . 1 . Vertical section of fruit . 2 . Male catkin .

End of Article: JUNIPER
[back]
JUNIN
[next]
JUNIUS

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.