Rosemary: Difference between revisions

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'''Rosemary''' (''Rosmarinus officinallis'') is an aromatic evergreen shrub, with thick, blunt needle like leaves and either blue or pink flowers. Its [[Latin]] name (Rosmarinus) meaning "Dew of the Sea" apparently derived from the fact that its pale blue flowers looked like dew from a distance.
A plant used as a [[herb]], and for remembrance.

Rosemary is often associated with ''remembrance'', and was worn by Greek scholars when they were taking examinations as well as by those at a funeral to remember the deceased.

The most remarkable claim made on behalf of rosemary was by Queen Izabella of [[Hungary]] in the [[14th century]]. She claimed that at the age of 72 an infusion of it had so revitalised her body, which was racked with gout and rheumatism, that the King of [[Poland]] proposed to her.

==See Also==

*[[Rosemary (Maplet)|Rosemary according to Maplet's ''A Greene Forest'']]
*[[Rosemary (Askham)|Rosemary according to Askham's Herbal]]

Revision as of 23:48, 16 June 2004

Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinallis) is an aromatic evergreen shrub, with thick, blunt needle like leaves and either blue or pink flowers. Its Latin name (Rosmarinus) meaning "Dew of the Sea" apparently derived from the fact that its pale blue flowers looked like dew from a distance.

Rosemary is often associated with remembrance, and was worn by Greek scholars when they were taking examinations as well as by those at a funeral to remember the deceased.

The most remarkable claim made on behalf of rosemary was by Queen Izabella of Hungary in the 14th century. She claimed that at the age of 72 an infusion of it had so revitalised her body, which was racked with gout and rheumatism, that the King of Poland proposed to her.

See Also