Skip to main content
Wellcome Collection homepage
Visit us
What’s on
Stories
Collections
Get involved
About us
Sign in to your library account
Search our stories, images, catalogue and events
Library account
Search our stories, images, catalogue and events
Search
Works search
Search the catalogue
Search
All
Stories
Images
Catalogue
Events
Formats
Digital Images (1)
Dates
From
to
Locations
Online (1)
Subjects
Countryside (1)
Garden (1)
Green (1)
Herbal remedies (1)
Petal (1)
Poison (1)
Types/Techniques
Contributors
Dr Henry Oakeley (1)
Languages
Submit
1 result
Search result sorting
Sort by:
Relevance
Production dates
Sort order:
Ascending
Descending
Submit
Page
1
of 1
Digital Images
Online
Albizia julibrissin Durazz. Fabaceae. Persian silk tree. Called 'shabkhosb' in Persian, meaning 'sleeping tree' as the pinnate leaves close up at night. Tropical tree. Named for Filippo degli Albizzi, an Italian naturalist, who brought seeds from Constantinople to Florence in 1749, and introduced it to European horticulture. The specific epithet comes from the Persian 'gul-i abrisham' which means 'silk flower'. Distribution: South Africa to Ethiopia, Senegal, Madagascar, Asia. Bark is poisonous and emetic and antihelminthic. Various preparations are widely used for numerous conditions and the oxitocic albitocin is abortifacient. However, studies on the seeds and bark of other Albizia species in Africa, demonstrate it is highly toxic, half a kilogram of seeds given to a quarter ton bull, killed it in two hours (Neuwinger, 1996). A useful tree for controlling soil erosion, producing shade in coffee plantations, and as a decorative shade tree in gardens. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley
Page
1
of 1