Re: Anglo-Saxon Plant-Name Survey
- From: "Grethe" <grethe.ladyhawk@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 7 Apr 2006 23:31:11 +0200
"Peter Alaca" <P.Alaca@xxxxxx> skrev i en meddelelse
news:4436cd7a$0$21530$dbd4f001@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Grethe wrote: news:4436ba84$0$27608$edfadb0f@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"celia" <c_a_blay@xxxxxxxxxxx> skrev i en meddelelse
news:1144435524.937322.36020@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Congratulations with your granddaughter,
Grethe wrote:
Hej!
Have you finished the stuff about 'dodder'?
Grethe
I don't think we established much.
Eorthrima = Dodder is still questionable.
The classical sources could be broomrape rather
than Dodder.
The reference to Dodder seed flavouring wine in
the Talmud is so far only based on an online source.
Probably more progress than with Uma though.
All contributions gratefully received. I'm off to
Bristol for my grandaughter's first birthday.
Celia
have a nice time. `:)
Just an addition then, from a little article from 2003 about
plant food. The Tollund Man (Silkeborg) from Iron Age,
sacrificed to the moor, had in his stomach among other
things the oily seeds from dodder (sæd-dodder = Camelina
sativa). Dodder and Flax were popular in Denmark in the
beginning of the Iron Age, but Dodder lost gradually its
significance and was not grown after 800 AD. There is a
fine little drawing of Dodder, do you have a picture of it?
Also in Holland it is regarded as a typical Iron Age crop,
e.g. on the so called Celthic Fields. Today it is very rare.
I read somewhere that the oil from the seed was particulary
used as lampoil and to treat leather.
--
p.a.
The Celthic Fields, that sounds fascinating.
Well, I have fallen over another source! The plant was
introduced again, either late in the 1700s or in the beginning
of the 1800s. It is not certain that this counts for Denmark
only, but it was written in 1806 that dodder was cultivated
in some places for the seeds, their oil used for food and lamps,
the pressed rests for cattle fodder, and for geese and ducks,
and dodder was mixed in bread flour. Danish oil factories made
oil cakes for cows ab. 1870, but the plant never gained any
importance.
Dodder is cultivated in Middle Europe (the source is from1979),
where the oil is used for soap, lighting, varnish, cooking oil, the
pressed rests for cattle fodder.
Finito!
Grethe
.
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