Online Encyclopedia

MADDER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 280 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MADDER  , or DYERS' MADDER, the

root of Rubia tinctorum and perhaps also of R. peregrina, both
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European, R. cordifolia, a native of the hilly districts of India and of north-east
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Asia and
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Java, supplying the
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Indian madder or manjit . Rubia is a genus of about
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thirty-five
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species of the tribe Galieae of the order
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Rubiaceae, and much resembles the familiar Galiums, e.g. lady's bedstraw (G. verum) and the
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cleavers (G. aparine) of
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English hedges, having similarly whorled leaves, but the parts of the flowers are in
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fives and not fours, while the fruit is somewhat fleshy . The only
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British species is R. peregrina, which is found in Wales, the south and west of England, and in east and south Ireland . The use of madder appears to have been known from the earliest times, as
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cloth dyed with it has been found on the
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Egyptian mummies . It was the pevOi6avov used for dyeing the cloaks of the Libyan
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women in the days of Herodotus (Herod. iv . 189) . It is the ipvUpo3avov of Dioscorides, who speaks of its cultivation in
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Caria (iii . 16o), and of
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Hippocrates (De morb. mul. i.), and the Rubia of Pliny (xix . 17) . R. tinctorum, a native of western
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Europe, &c., has been extensively cultivated in south Europe, France, where it is called garance, and Holland, and to a small extent in the
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United States . Large quantities have been imported into England from Smyrna, Trieste, Leghorn, &c . The cultivation, however, decreased after alizarin, the red colouring principle of madder, was made artificially .

Madder was employed medicinally by the ancients and in the

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middle ages . Gerard, in 1597, speaks of it as having been cultivated in many gardens in his day, and describes its supposed many virtues (Herball, P.96o) ; but any pharmacological or therapeutic
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action which madder may possess is unrecognizable . Its most remarkable physiological effect is that of colouring red the bones of animals fed upon it, as also the claws and beaks of birds . This appears to be due to the chemical affinity of phosphate of lime for the colouring
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matter (Pereira, Mat. med., vol. ii. pt . 2, p . 52) . This
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property has been of much use in enabling physiologists to ascertain themanner in which bones develop, and the functions of the various types of cells found in growing bone . R. chilensis has been used for dyeing red from time immemorial . The chay-root, which furnishes a red dye in Coromandel and other parts of India, is the root-bark of Oldenlandia umbellata, a low-growing plant of the same
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family as madder .

End of Article: MADDER
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