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Mandragora officinarum

From Pharmacopedia
Revision as of 17:57, 15 May 2026 by MDElliottMD (talk | contribs) (Create skeletal Plant Medicines page from Pendell)
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Plant Medicine, Daimonica, Tropane alkaloid plant
Mandragora officinarum
Mandrake
Mandragora officinarum is a Mediterranean Solanaceae perennial with a thick, often anthropomorphic taproot. The root's resemblance to a human form drove millennia of folklore: said to grow beneath gallows from a hanged man's semen, said to scream when uprooted, said to confer fertility, sleep, and divination. Hildegard von Bingen distinguished male and female roots. Joan of Arc was charged with wearing a manniken between her breasts.

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See also

Datura, Brugmansia, Atropa belladonna, Hyoscyamus niger

References

Summary
Classes
Plant Medicine, Daimonica, Tropane alkaloid plant
Common uses
Historical medicinal0, Folkloric talisman0
Pharmacy
Preparations
Root, traditionally carved into mannikens or infused into wine
Pharmacology
Routes
Oral
Purported mechanism
Tropane alkaloids: hyoscyamine, scopolamine, atropine, apoatropine.