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Frederick J. Simoons - Plants Of Life, Plants Of Death

Here you can read online Frederick J. Simoons - Plants Of Life, Plants Of Death full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 1998, publisher: University of Wisconsin Press, genre: Home and family. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Pythagoras, the ancient Greek mathematician, did not himself eat fava beans in any form; in fact, he banned his followers from eating them. Cultural geographer Frederick Simoons disputes the contention that Pythagoras established that ban because he recognized the danger of favism, a disease that afflicts genetically-predisposed individuals who consume fava beans. Contradicting more deterministic explanations of history, Simoons argues that ritual considerations led to the Pythagorean ban. In his fascinating and thorough new study, Simoons examines plants associated with ritual purity, fertility, prosperity, and life, on the one hand, or with ritual impurity, sickness, ill fate, and death, on the other. Plants of Life, Plants of Death offers a wealth of detail from not only history, ethnography, religious studies, classics, and folklore, but also from ethnobotany and medicine. Simoons surveys a vast geographical region extending from Europe through the Near East to India and China. He tells the story of Indias giant sacred fig trees, the pipal and the banyan, and their changing role in ritual, religion, and as objects of pilgrimage from antiquity to the present day; the history of mandrake and ginseng, man roots whose uses from Europe to China have been shaped by the perception that they are human in form; and the story of garlic and onions as impure foods of bad odor in that same broad region. Simoons also identifies and discusses physical characteristics of plants that have contributed to their contrasting ritual roles, and he emphasizes the point that the ritual roles of plants are also shaped by basic human concernsdesire for good health and prosperity, hopes for fertility and offspring, fear of violence, evil and deaththat were as important in antiquity as they are today. It dazzles as a piece of scholarship.Daniel W. Gade, University of Vermont

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title Plants of Life Plants of Death author Simoons Frederick J - photo 1

title:Plants of Life, Plants of Death
author:Simoons, Frederick J.
publisher:University of Wisconsin Press
isbn10 | asin:0299159000
print isbn13:9780299159009
ebook isbn13:9780585176208
language:English
subjectPlants--Folklore, Medicinal plants--Folklore, Plants--Mythology, Human-plant relationships.
publication date:1998
lcc:GR780.S55 1998eb
ddc:398/.368
subject:Plants--Folklore, Medicinal plants--Folklore, Plants--Mythology, Human-plant relationships.
Page iii
Plants of Life, Plants of Death
Frederick J. Simoons
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PRESS
Page iv
Disclaimer:
This book contains characters with diacritics. When the characters can be represented using the ISO 8859-1 character set ( http://www.w3.org/TR/images/latin1.gif ), netLibrary will represent them as they appear in the original text, and most computers will be able to show the full characters correctly. In order to keep the text searchable and readable on most computers, characters with diacritics that are not part of the ISO 8859-1 list will be represented without their diacritical marks.
The University of Wisconsin Press
2537 Daniels Street
Madison, Wisconsin 53718
3 Henrietta Street
London WC2E 8LU, England
Copyright 1998
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
All rights reserved
5 4 3 2 1
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Simoons, Frederick J.
Plants of life, plants of death / Frederick J. Simoons.
586 pp Picture 2cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-299-15900-0 (cloth : alk. paper).
ISBN 0-299-15904-3 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. PlantsFolklore. 2. Medicinal plantsFolklore. 3. PlantsMythology.
4. Human-plant relationships. I. Title.
GR780 1998
398'.368dc21 98-9689
Page v
To our friends in Wisconsin:
Louise Clark and family, Virginia Emlen,
Ray and Mary Evert,
Ruth Huttenberg and family,
Clarence and Rhea Olmstead,
Charles and Patricia Schrade,
and Thompson and Diana Webb,
and in memory of academic friends
who died recently and too soon:
John Emlen, Norman Kretchmer,
Richard P. Palmieri, James J. Parsons,
and Robert V. Pyle
Page vii
Contents
Illustrations
xii
Preface
xiv
1
Introduction
3
2
Tulsi, Holy Basil of the Hindus; with Notes on Sweet Basil in the Mediterranean World
7
Picture 3
Tulsi among the Sacred Plants of Hinduism
7
Picture 4
TulsiBotanic, Geographic, and Historical Background
8
Picture 5
Tulsi's Special Ties with Vaishnavism
9
Picture 6
General Sketch
9
Picture 7
Tulsi Beads Symbolic of Vaishnavism
14
Picture 8
Tulsi's Ties with Other Hindu Deities
16
Picture 9
Places of Tulsi Cultivation
17
Picture 10
Care and Worship of Household Tulsi Plants
20
Picture 11
General Sketch
20
Picture 12
Circumambulation of the Tulsi Plant
23
Picture 13
Benefits Gained from Worship of the Tulsi Plant
26
Picture 14
General Background
26
Picture 15
Tulsi's Ability to Repel Evil and to Purify
28

Page viii
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