Additional notes (click to expand)

Medicinal

Rhamnus frangula L. Rhamnaceae 'Asplenifolia' Alder Buckthorn. Deciduous shrub. Distribution: Europe, North Africa and to China. Rhamnus purshiana is the source of Cascara sagrada a powerful purgative. Rhamnus is the Greek for spiny shrubs; frangula is the Latin word for Buckthorn. Dodoens (1554) calls it Fragula and in Lyte's translation he calls it Black Aller (sic) or Alnus nigra and says that the bark soaked in wine and drunk causes profuse vomiting, and boiled in vinegar and applied to the scalp, cures scurf; cattle that eat the leaves, he reports, produce more milk. It contains anthraquinones, the same chemicals as found in Senokot. It is licensed for use in Traditional Herbal Medicines in the UK (UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)).

Nomenclature

Dodoens (1554) calls it Fragula and in Lyte's translation he calls it Black Aller (sic) or Alnus nigra
Lyte, Henry. (1578). Nievve Herball or Historie of Plantes.

Syn of Frangula alnus 'Asplenifolia'
The Royal Horticultural Society Horticultural Database, available at www.rhs.org.uk

Rhamnus frangula 'Aspleniifolia'

Family: RHAMNACEAE
Genus: Rhamnus
Species: frangula
Cultivar: 'Aspleniifolia'
Garden status: Not currently grown


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