{"id":6876,"date":"2015-05-14T11:00:15","date_gmt":"2015-05-14T15:00:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=6876"},"modified":"2021-07-23T11:56:58","modified_gmt":"2021-07-23T15:56:58","slug":"the-earliest-herbals","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2015\/05\/14\/the-earliest-herbals\/","title":{"rendered":"The Earliest Herbals"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Michael North<\/em><\/p>\n This post is the first in a series<\/a> exploring the National Library of Medicine\u2019s rich and varied collection of \u201cherbals,\u201d which are books devoted to the description of medicinal plants (and sometimes other natural substances) with instructions on how to use them to treat illness. The Library\u2019s herbals are some of the most beautifully illustrated books in the collection, and many contain information that has not yet been investigated using modern scientific methods.<\/p>\n Many of the earliest medical writings were herbals, which described plants and how they could be used to heal illnesses. Most of these written treatises likely began as traditional oral information, passed down from generation to generation, sometimes as wider cultural information and sometimes as secrets kept within families or small social groups. Often these collections of knowledge included other natural materials in the environment which could be used as medicines, such as milk, salt, honey, and even gems; along with plants these other materials are known collectively as \u201cmateria medica.\u201d<\/p>\n In the West, the oldest recorded references to medicinal plants are in the fifth-century Greek Hippocratic Corpus<\/a>, which contains numerous herbal remedies, however, none of the many tracts in the Corpus focuses on plants themselves by giving descriptions of their appearance, where they might be found, or what names they are known by in different locales. One of the first Classical Greek herbals that has survived and been passed down to us is Historia Plantarum<\/em> (\u03a0\u03b5\u03c1\u1f76 \u03c6\u03c5\u03c4\u1ff6\u03bd \u1f31\u03c3\u03c4\u03bf\u03c1\u03af\u03b1<\/em> in Greek) by Theophrastus (ca. 371\u2013ca. 287 B.C.E.), a noted philosopher who succeeded his mentor Aristotle<\/a> as the head of the Lyceum, the center of the Peripatetic School in Athens. Only nine of the ten books of the Historia Plantarum<\/em> have survived; the first eight books describe the various plants found in the Eastern Mediterranean and the ninth book describes their medicinal uses. NLM holds numerous early printed editions of this book, including an unusual one published in France in 1505<\/a> which is a counterfeit (an unauthorized printing, meant to deceive) of an edition printed in 1504 by noted Venetian printer Aldus Manutius<\/a>.<\/p>\n But the real blockbuster of ancient herbals was written by Greek physician Dioscorides<\/a> of Anazarba, in what is now Turkey, in the first century. His De Materia Medica<\/em> (\u03a0\u03b5\u03c1\u03b9 \u03cd\u03bb\u03b7\u03c2 \u03af\u03b1\u03c4\u03c1\u03b9\u03ba\u03b7\u03c2<\/em>), written in Greek between about 50 and 70 C.E., describes about five hundred plants. His arrangement of the plants is not very systematic, but for each entry he states the plant\u2019s name and its synonyms in a few other languages, then a short description of the plant and where it can be found, and finally a description of how the plant can be prepared to create a remedy. This herbal was likely illustrated, and some early manuscripts<\/a> of the text survive with hand-drawn illustrations from the sixth and seventh centuries. The work was extremely popular in Latin translation (which we will discuss in a later post), and in its original Greek once it was first printed in Venice in 1499<\/a> by Aldus Manutius. The Library holds over 100 editions of Dioscorides in half a dozen languages printed between the 15th and 18th centuries, some of them with beautiful woodcut illustrations.<\/p>\n Another important early herbal is that of Pliny the Elder (C.E. 23\u2013August 25, C.E. 79), whose Naturalis Historia<\/em> (Natural History<\/em><\/a>) is an encyclopedia covering natural phenomena of all sorts including geography, astronomy, and biology. Books 12 through 29 covers plants along with their medicinal uses. Because it was originally written in Latin, it was directly accessible to many medieval scholars, and it was printed frequently in the 15th century until it was attacked in 1492 by Renaissance scholar Niccol\u00f2 Leoniceno (1428\u20131524) in his De Plinii et Aliorum in Medicina Erroribus <\/em><\/a>(On the Medical Errors of Pliny and Others<\/em>) for being unscientific in its approach. Some of NLM\u2019s oldest printed books are early editions of Pliny\u2019s Naturalis Historia<\/em>, including a beautiful edition printed in Parma in 1476<\/a> by Stephanus Corallus, the second printer in Parma, Italy, and an early Italian translation<\/a> printed in Venice in the same year by Nicolas Jenson, one of that city\u2019s first printers.<\/p>\n This article is the first in a series about NLM\u2019s large and varied collection of herbals<\/a> dating from the Middle Ages to the 20th century. To learn more about them, please feel free to contact me at northm@mail.nih.gov<\/em><\/a><\/em>. <\/em><\/p>\n<\/a>
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