Additional notes (click to expand)
Medicinal
In traditional herbal medicine:
Wood sanicle used to be widely used as a herbal remedy and has a long-standing reputation for healing wounds and treating internal bleeding. The herb is traditionally thought to be detoxifying and has also been taken internally to treat skin problems[254]. A potentially valuable plant, but it is little used in modern herbalism[7, 254].
http://www.pfaf.org, https://pfaf.org/user/plant.aspx?latinname=Sanicula+europaea
Nomenclature
Also called Diapensiam in Gabriel Humelberger's edition of Apuleius's 'De medicaminibus herbarum' (1537) on page 186; and in Matthiolus's Commentaries on Dioscorides (1569) with a good woodcut on page 590
Geographical distribution
- Asia-Temperate, Caucasus
- Asia-Temperate, Russian Far East
- Asia-Temperate, Siberia
- Asia-Temperate, Western Asia, Iran
- Asia-Temperate, Western Asia, Lebanon-Syria
- Asia-Temperate, Western Asia, Turkey
- Europe, Eastern Europe
- Europe, Middle Europe
- Europe, Northern Europe
- Europe, Northern Europe, Great Britain
- Europe, Southeastern Europe
- Europe, Southwestern Europe
Sanicula europaea L.
Family: APIACEAEGenus: Sanicula
Species: europaea L.
Common names: Sanicle
Distribution summary: Eurasia
Habit: Perennial
Hardiness: H5 - Hardy; cold winter
Habitat: Woods, thickets, banks
Garden status: Currently grown
Garden location: Europe & Middle East (J)
Flowering months: May, June, July, August, September
Reason for growing: Medicinal