| Family:
N.O. Leguminosae Fabaceae (Leguminoseae
in part)
Other names:
Herba ruta caprariae. Italian Fitch.
French Lilac. Pestilenzkraut (German:
"Pestilence Plant").
Habitat :
Grows wild in Europe, naturalized in
Britain. This profuse-flowering, hardy
perennial herb is a native of Southern
Europe and the Mediterranean - Gerard
(one of the most famous historical
herbalists) calls it Italian Fitch - and
it is widely cultivated in gardens in
England.
It was chosen
as an ingredient of Wonderup because:
its active ingredients are flavonoids,
balancing agents of the natural
production of female hormones,
which naturally bind with the receptor
cells in the mammary glands, thus
producing breast development and
improving the circulation of the mammary
glands.
Other
characteristics and properties:
* flavonoids
are also the origin of the plant's most
known property: it is an effective galactagogue,
stimulating both the production and flow
of milk (by stimulating
prolactin), and has been shown to
increase milk output by up to 50% in some
cases. It also increases the nutrients in
mother's milk
* hypoglycaemic and antidiabetic
- reduces blood sugar levels. Its use is
thus potentially indicated in the
treatment of diabetes mellitus.
This must not replace insulin therapy,
however, and should occur only under
professional supervision.
* diaphoretic - affects liver
and detoxification systems due to
its ability to increase perspiration, and
promote toxin release through the skin.
Also used to assist immune system and
reactivity due to its ability to break a fever.
* weak diuretic - affects liver
and detoxification systems due to its
ability to increase the secretion of
urine, and excretion of waste through the
urine
Culinary
uses: In the northern
countries they use this herb for making
their cheeses instead of Rennet, whence
it is called also
"CheeseRennet".
History and
Curiosities: Goat's Rue, known
in the old Herbals as Herba rutae
caprariae, is a leguminous plant that
in former times was much employed on
account of its diaphoretic properties in
malignant fevers and the plague, hence
one of its German popular names of Pestilenzkraut
(Pestilence Plant).
'The leaves, gathered just as the
plant is going into flower and dried,
with the addition of boiling water, make
an infusion which being drunk
plentifully, excites sweating and is good
in fevers.' (Hill's Universal Herbal,
1832.)
It was also used as a remedy for worms
and recommended as a cure for the bites
of serpents.
In 1873 Gillet-Damitte, in a
communication to the French Academy,
stated that this plant when given to cows
would increase the secretion of milk
from 35 to 50 per cent, since which time,
Cerisoli, Millbank and several French
physicians have confirmed that Goat's Rue
is a powerful galactagogue.
The herb is official in the National
Formulary IV attached to the United
States Pharmacopoeia.
In Marzell's 'Wrterbuch der
Deutschen Pflanzennamen' - Dictionary of
German Plant Names (Marzell, H.,
Wrterbuch der Deutschen
Planzennamen, Liefrung 13, Leipzig. 1954)
it is quoted as one of the "Holy
Hay" plants, along with sanfoin
(Onobrychis viciaefolia) and alfalfa
(Medicago sativa). Thus, in France it was
known in some localities as sanfoin
d'Espagne (Spanish Holy Hay), in
Gallo-italic dialect as Sanftin salvadegh
(Wild Holy Hay) and in Germany as Ewigen
Klee (Everlasting Clover). The legendary
folk symbolism of forage plants
bearing such names is that they were
present in the manger at Bethlehem
and burst into bloom when the Christ
Child was laid on them - thus
miraculously signifying, like the Star of
Bethlehem, his divinity and his dominion
over nature." (John S. Stokes, Jr. -
Galega Officinalis: An Adventure in Plant
Nauralization - Morris Arboretum
Bulletin, Vol 15, 1964)
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