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Volume 52, Issue 2 (October 2014), pp. 95-136
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A Fistful of Bladdernuts: The Shifting Uses of Staphylea pinnata L. as Documented by Archaeology, History, and Ethnology
Andreas G. Heiss1; Dragana FilipoviĆ 2; Anely Nedelcheva 3; Gabriela Ruß-Popa 4; Klaus Wanninger 5; Georg Schramayr 6; Renata Perego 7; Stefanie Jacomet 7
Author Affilations
Abstract
An
interdisciplinary approach combining archaeological, historical, and
ethnological data is used in the attempt to draw a general image of the
role of bladdernut (Staphylea pinnata) in past societies. The purposes
encountered in this literature study extend from nutritional and
medicinal uses to particular ritual/religious aspects, incorporating
apotropaic and sympathetic magic, the use in grave goods, and the role
of bladdernut in rosaries. In the two latter purposes, the ‘cut nose’
aspect of the seeds is suggested to be an important symbolic factor.
Research
into the past cultural dimensions of plants is often restricted to
plants with important uses, cultivated for millennia and ever sought
after, and of fundamental meaning to human subsistence and economy. This
is definitely true for the main cultivated crops of the Old World, and
for plants regarded essential for other (e.g. medical) reasons.
Bladdernut is definitely not one of these ‘great’ useful plants. Still,
this shrub has had a curious past which seemed to us worth
investigating, for the beliefs and meanings that still cling to it. As
we will see, new beliefs are still developing.
Largely building upon the previous detailed work by the first author,1 the current study pursues the goal of drawing as complete a picture as possible of the cultural relevance of bladdernut in past societies. This has been done by critically evaluating the extant literature on material evidence, written historical sources, and ethnographic studies on Staphylea pinnata across Europe, and trying to suggest new interpretations for this plant. Originally given as a conference paper by the first author listed, the following article has been considerably reworked and now includes substantially more research than previously.
Largely building upon the previous detailed work by the first author,1 the current study pursues the goal of drawing as complete a picture as possible of the cultural relevance of bladdernut in past societies. This has been done by critically evaluating the extant literature on material evidence, written historical sources, and ethnographic studies on Staphylea pinnata across Europe, and trying to suggest new interpretations for this plant. Originally given as a conference paper by the first author listed, the following article has been considerably reworked and now includes substantially more research than previously.
Folk Life
Print ISSN: 0430-8778
Online ISSN: 1759-670X
Previously published as:
- Gwerin: A Half-Yearly Journal of Folk Life
Published on behalf of Society for Folk Life Studies
Citation:
Andreas G. Heiss, Dragana FilipoviĆ , Anely Nedelcheva , Gabriela Ruß-Popa , Klaus Wanninger , Georg Schramayr , Renata Perego , and Stefanie Jacomet . "A Fistful of Bladdernuts: The Shifting Uses of Staphylea pinnata L. as Documented by Archaeology, History, and Ethnology." Folk Life 2014; 52(2), 95-136.DOI: 10.1179/0430877814Z.00000000031