Translations:Garlic/67/en: Difference between revisions

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Message definition (Garlic)
===Folk medicine===
Garlic has been used for traditional medicine in diverse cultures such as in Korea, Egypt, Japan, China, Rome, and Greece. In his ''[[Natural History (Pliny)|Natural History]]'', [[Pliny the Elder|Pliny]] gave a [[traditional medicine|list of conditions]] in which garlic was considered beneficial (''N.H.'' xx. 23). [[Galen]], writing in the second century, eulogized garlic as the "rustic's theriac" (cure-all) (see F. Adams' ''Paulus Aegineta'', p. 99). [[Alexander Neckam]], a writer of the 12th century (see Wright's edition of his works, p. 473, 1863), discussed it as a [[palliative]] for the heat of the sun in field labor. In the 17th century, [[Thomas Sydenham]] valued it as an application in confluent [[smallpox]], and [[William Cullen]]'s ''Materia Medica'' of 1789 found some [[dropsy|dropsies]] cured by it alone.

Folk medicine

Garlic has been used for traditional medicine in diverse cultures such as in Korea, Egypt, Japan, China, Rome, and Greece. In his Natural History, Pliny gave a list of conditions in which garlic was considered beneficial (N.H. xx. 23). Galen, writing in the second century, eulogized garlic as the "rustic's theriac" (cure-all) (see F. Adams' Paulus Aegineta, p. 99). Alexander Neckam, a writer of the 12th century (see Wright's edition of his works, p. 473, 1863), discussed it as a palliative for the heat of the sun in field labor. In the 17th century, Thomas Sydenham valued it as an application in confluent smallpox, and William Cullen's Materia Medica of 1789 found some dropsies cured by it alone.