Lithospermum purpurocaeruleum
Lithospermum purpurocaeruleum | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
(unranked): | Angiosperms |
(unranked): | Eudicots |
(unranked): | Asterids |
Order: | incertae sedis |
Family: | Boraginaceae |
Genus: | Lithospermum |
Species: | L. purpurocaeruleum |
Binomial name | |
Lithospermum purpurocaeruleum L. | |
Synonyms | |
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Lithospermum purpurocaeruleum or Purple Gromwell is a herbaceous perennial rhizomatous plant of the genus Lithospermum, belonging to the family Boraginaceae.
Etymology
The Latin name of the species purpurocaeruleum means purple and blue, referred to the changing colour of the flowers with the progress of flowering.
Description
Distribution
This species is widespread in British Isles, in the central Europe up to South Russia and in Mediterranean countries from Spain to the eastern Turkey.
Habitat
These plants occur in dry and warm forests with sparse deciduous vegetation, in the meadows on the edge of the wood, in hedgerows and scrublands. They prefer calcareous soils rich in humus, at an altitude of 0–1,800 metres (0–5,906 ft) above sea level.
Culture
It has been cultivated in Japan since the Nara period for its root, which can be used for herbal medicine and to make dyes.
One Japanese word for the plant, murasaki (紫), inspired the pen name "Lady Murasaki" for the author of The Tale of Genji and is also the source of the general Japanese term for the color purple, murasaki iro (紫色).
The dyes made from its root also had other names, such as shikon (紫根), but all of them were difficult to work with because of their requirement for an alum-rich mordant and the resulting colors' extreme vulnerability to photobleaching. During the Heian Period, sumptuary laws restricted murasaki-dyed clothing to the Empress and her ladies in waiting.
References
- Pignatti S. - Flora d'Italia – Edagricole – 1982, Vol. II, pag. 398
- Tutin, T.G. et al. - Flora Europaea, second edition - 1993
- Dalby, Liza (2001). Kimono: Fashioning Culture.University of Washington Press, pp. 236–237. ISBN 0-295-98155-5.
- Wada Yoshiko; Mary Kellogg Rice, and Jane Barton (1983). Shibori: The Inventive Art of Japanese Shaped Resist Dyeing. Kodansha, pp. 278–279. ISBN 0-87011-559-6.
- http://www.aisf.or.jp/~jaanus/deta/m/murasaki.htm Retrieved on 2007-04-20.
- McGann, Kass (2003), Things to Wear — A History of Japanese Clothing: Japanese Dyestuffs, retrieved 2007-04-20
External links
- Media related to Buglossoides purpurocaeruleum at Wikimedia Commons
- Data related to Buglossoides purpurocaeruleum at Wikispecies