User Contributed Dictionary
ferulā
Inflection
Extensive Definition
Ferula (from Latin "rod" or
"ferula") is a genus of
about 170 species of
flowering
plants in the family Apiaceae, native
to the Mediterranean
region east to central Asia, mostly growing
in arid climates. They are herbaceous perennial
plants growing to 1–4 m tall, with stout,
hollow, somewhat succulent stems. The leaves are tripinnate or even more
finely divided, with a stout basal sheath clasping the stem. The
flowers are yellow,
produced in large umbels.
Many plants of this genus, especially F. communis are referred to
as "giant fennel," although they are not fennel in the strict sense.
Selected species
- Ferula assafoetida - Asafoetida
- Ferula caspica
- Ferula communis - Giant fennel
- Ferula conocaula
- Ferula foetida
- Ferula gummosa, syn. galbaniflua - Galbanum
- Ferula hermonis
- Ferula karelinii
- Ferula linkii
- Ferula longifolia
- Ferula marmarica
- Ferula moschata, syn. sumbul - Muskroot
- Ferula narthex - Ferula
- Ferula orientalis
- Ferula persica
- Ferula schair
- Ferula szowitziana
- Ferula tingitiana
- The Roman spice silphium probably came from a now extinct species of Ferula.
Uses
The gummy resin of many species of Ferula is used for medical or culinary purposes:- Ferula assafoetida is used to make the spice asafoetida, or hing
- Ferula gummosa makes galbanum
- Ferula persica makes sagapenum
- Ferula moschata makes sumbul
- Ferula tingitana makes "African Ammoniacum"
- Silphium was used to make laserpicium
- Ferula gummosa makes galbanum
The Romans called the hollow light rod made from
this plant a ferula (compare also fasces, judicial birches). Such
rods were used for walking
sticks, splints, for
stirring boiling liquids, and for corporal
punishment.
The ferula also shows up in mythological contexts. The
main shaft of a thyrsus
was traditionally made from this plant, and Prometheus
smuggled fire to humanity by hiding it in a ferula as well.
Women in Central Asia as well as a small number
in the Appalachian mountains of North Carolina use these to induce
abortion in first trimester.
ferula in Corsican: Ferula (genaru)
ferula in German: Steckenkräuter
ferula in Spanish: Ferula
ferula in French: Ferula
ferula in Italian: Ferula (genere)
ferula in Latin: Ferula (genus)
ferula in Portuguese: Ferula
ferula in Contenese: 阿魏