|
|
Alpine Lady's Mantle (Alchemilla
alpina) Click on graphic for larger
image |
Lady's Mantle
Botanical: Alchemilla vulgaris (LINN.) Family: N.O. Rosaceae
---Synonyms---Lion's Foot. Bear's Foot. Nine
Hooks. Leontopodium. Stellaria (French) Pied-de-lion.
(German) Frauenmantle. ---Parts Used---Herb, root.
---Habitat---The Lady's Mantle and the Parsley Piert, two
small, inconspicuous plants, have considerable reputation as herbal
remedies. They both belong to the genus Alchemilla of the great
order Rosaceae, most of the members of which are natives of the American
Andes, only a few being found in Europe, North America and Northern and
Western Asia. In Britain, we have only three species, Alchemilla
vulgaris, the Common Lady's Mantle, A. arvensis, the Field
Lady's Mantle or Parsley Piert, and A. alpina, less frequent and
only found in mountainous districts.
The Common Lady's Mantle is generally distributed over Britain, but
more especially in the colder districts and on high-lying ground, being
found up to an altitude of 3,600 feet in the Scotch Highlands. It is not
uncommon in moist, hilly pastures and by streams, except in the south-east
of England, and is abundant in Yorkshire, especially in the Dales. It is
indeed essentially a plant of the north, freely found beyond the Arctic
circle in Europe, Asia and also in Greenland and Labrador, and only on
high mountain ranges, such as the Himalayas, if found in southern
latitudes.
The plant is of graceful growth and though only a foot high and green
throughout- flowers, stem and leaves alike, and therefore inconspicuous -
the rich form of its foliage and the beautiful shape of its clustering
blossoms make it worthy of notice.
---Description---The rootstock is
perennialblack, stout and short - and from it rises the slender erect
stem. The whole plant is clothed with soft hairs. The lower, radical
leaves, large and handsome, 6 to 8 inches in diameter, are borne on
slender stalks, 6 to 18 inches long and are somewhat kidneyshaped in
general outline, with their margins cut into seven or mostly nine broad,
but shallow lobes, finely toothed at the edges, from which it has obtained
one of its local names: 'Nine Hooks.' The upper leaves are similar and
either stalkless, or on quite short footstalks and are all actually
notched and toothed. A noticeable feature is the leaflike stipules, also
toothed, which embrace the stem.
The flowers, which are in bloom from June to August, are numerous and
small, only about 1/8 inch in diameter, yellow-green in colour, in loose,
divided clusters at the end of the freely-branching flower-stems, each on
a short stalk, or pedicle. There are no petals, the calyx is four-cleft,
with four conspicuous little bracteoles that have the appearance of outer
and alternate segments of the calyx. There are four stamens, inserted on
the mouth of the calyx, their filaments jointed.
The rootstock is astringent and edible and the leaves are eaten by
sheep and cattle.
The common name, Lady's Mantle (in its German form,
Frauenmantle), was first bestowed on it by the sixteenth-century
botanist, Jerome Bock, always known by the Latinized version of his name:
Tragus. It appears under this name in his famous History of Plants,
published in 1532, and Linnaeus adopted it. In the Middle Ages, this plant
had been associated, like so many flowers, with the Virgin Mary (hence it
is Lady's Mantle, not Ladies' Mantle), the lobes of the leaves being
supposed to resemble the scalloped edges of a mantle. In mediaeval Latin
we also find it called Leontopodium (lion's foot), probably from
its spreading root-leaves, and this has become in modern French,
Pied-de-lion. We occasionally find the same idea expressed in two
English local names, 'Lion's foot' and 'Bear's foot.' It has also been
called 'Stellaria,' from the radiating character of its lower leaves, but
this belongs more properly to quite another group of plants, with
star-like blossoms of pure white.
A yellow fungus sometimes attacks the plant known as Uromyces
alchemillae, and has the curious effect of causing abnormal length of
the leaf-stalk and rendering the blade of the leaf smaller and of a paler
green colour; this fungus produces the same effect in other plants.
The generic name Alchemilla is derived from the Arabic word,
Alkemelych (alchemy), and was bestowed on it, according to some old
writers, because of the wonder-working powers of the plant. Others held
that the alchemical virtues lay in the subtle influence the foliage
imparted to the dewdrops that lay in its furrowed leaves and in the little
cup formed by its joined stipules, these dewdrops constituting part of
many mystic potions.
---Part Used Medicinally---The whole herb,
gathered in June and July when in flower and when the leaves are at their
best, and dried.
The root is sometimes also employed, generally fresh.
---Medicinal Action and Uses---The Lady's Mantle
has astringent and styptic properties, on account of the tannin it
contains. It is 'of a very drying and binding character' as the old
herbalists expressed it, and was formerly considered one of the best
vulneraries or wound herbs.
- Culpepper says of it:
- 'Lady's Mantle is very proper for inflamed wounds and to stay
bleeding, vomitings, fluxes of all sorts, bruises by falls and ruptures.
It is one of the most singular wound herbs and therefore highly prized
and praised, used in all wounds inward and outward, to drink a decoction
thereof and wash the wounds therewith, or dip tents therein and put them
into the wounds which wonderfully drieth up all humidity of the sores
and abateth all inflammations thereof. It quickly healeth green wounds,
not suffering any corruption to remain behind and cureth old sores,
though fistulous and hollow.'
In modern herbal treatment, it is
employed as a cure for excessive menstruation and is taken internally as
an infusion 1 OZ. of the dried herb to 1 pint of boiling water) in
teacupful doses as required and the same infusion is also employed as an
injections.
A strong decoction of the fresh root, by some considered the most
valuable part of the plant, has also been recommended as excellent to stop
all bleedings, and the root dried and reduced to powder is considered to
answer the same purpose and to be good for violent purgings.
In Sweden, a tincture of the leaves has been given in cases of
spasmodic or convulsive diseases, and an old authority states that if
placed under the pillow at night, the herb will promote quiet sleep.
Fluid extract, dose, 1/2 to 1 drachm.
Horses and sheep like the plant, and it has therefore been suggested as
a profitable fodder plant, but the idea has proved unpractical. Grazing
animals will not eat the leaves till the moisture in them is dissipated.
---Other Species--- Alchemilla
alpine, a mountain variety,found on the banks of Scotch rivulets. The
leaves are deeply divided into five oblong leaflets and are thickly
covered with lustrous silky hairs. A form of this plant in which the
leaflets are connate for one-third of their length is known as A.
conjuncta.
See PARSLEY
PIERT.
Purchase
this Herb from viablehealth.com
|