Lady's Mantle

Lady's Mantle

Quote box
quote = The plant is of graceful growth and though only a foot high and green throughout- flowers, stem and leaves alike, and therefore inconspicuous - the rich form of its foliage and the beautiful shape of its clustering blossoms make it worthy of notice.
source = Maud Grieve. 1931cite web
url = http://www.botanical.com/mgmh/l/ladman05.html
title = Lady's Mantle
accessdate = 2008-05-17
author = M. Grieve
authorlink = Maud Grieve
year = 1931
format = HTML
work = A Modern Herbal
publisher = © Copyright Protected 1995-2008 Botanical.com
]
width = 33%
align = left

Lady's Mantle is a genus of rosaceous herbs ("Alchemilla"), which has leaves with rounded and finely serrated lobes,1913] of which a few species have been cultivated for their unobtrusive beautycite web
url = http://www.chicago-botanic.org/downloads/planteval_notes/no24_alchemilla.pdf
title = An Evaluation Study of Alchemilla
accessdate = 2008-05-17
last = Hawke
first = Richard G.
format = HTML
work = Plant Evaluation Notes
publisher = Chicago Botanic Garden
] and herbal properties for centuries.

Mounded or clump forming perennials, the foliage is carried on fine stems that often self-layer, are handshaped with rounded lobes and covered in fine hairs [ Flora, The Gardeners Bible, ABC books, Global Book Publishing, Sydney, 2004, ISBN 0 7333 1439 2 ] Green to bright chartreuse small, insignificant flowers, without the showy petals that their cousins like "roses" ("Rosa") and "cinquefoils" ("Potentilla") have, are held in clusters above the foliage in late spring and summer.

Botanists in the late 1800s described the genus this way: Thus in the flowers of the "Alchemilla", the inner whorl of the perianth is wanting (nonexistent); the adrœcium (stamens) is also not unfrequently reduced to a single whorl."cite book
last = Strasburger
first = Eduard
authorlink = Eduard Strasburger
coauthors = Fritz Noll, Hobart Charles Porter, Heinrich Schenck, Andreas Franz Wilhelm Schimper
editor = Translated by Hobart Charles Porter
title = A Text-book of Botany
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=qqJuuC_L9yIC
date = 1898
publisher = Macmillan Publishers
pages = 632 pages
chapter = Dicotyledones
chapterurl = http://books.google.com/books?id=qqJuuC_L9yIC&pg=PA553&lpg=PA553
] __TOC__

Cultivation

The grey-green leaves of Lady's Mantle blend well with many colors in the garden, including purple, blue, pink, yellow and white. Cultivars of Lady's Mantle are temperate zone plants that prefer cool, moist, well-drained conditions with shade from hot sun. Plants are suitable for perennial borders or large rockeries. Propagation is by division, or can be raised from seed.;"Alchemilla mollis": Hardy in USA Plant Hardiness Zones 3 - 8. Easily grown in average, medium, well-drained soil in full sun to part shade. Prefers part afternoon shade in hot summer climates. Freely self-seeds in the garden to the point of being invasive in optimum growing conditions. Prompt removal of spent flower stems will not only prevent self-seeding but may also encourage a sparse, late summer rebloom.cite web
url = http://www.mobot.org/GARDENINGHELP/PLANTFINDER/plant.asp?code=B210
title = Alchemilla mollis
accessdate = 2008-05-17
author = Kemper Center For Home Gardening
format = HTML
publisher = Missouri Botanical Garden
] :;Cultivars of "A. mollis"::*Auslese::*Improved Form::*Robusta::*Senior::*Thriller

;"Alchemilla vulgaris": Both "A. vulgaris" and "A. mollis" are called Lady's Mantle and it is often not easy to identify one from the other. The flowers of "A. vulgaris" are smaller than "A. mollis" and tinged greenish rather than the yellowish of "A. mollis".cite web
url = http://msuplants.com/pd.asp?pid=93
title = Lady's Mantle "Alchemilla vulgaris"
accessdate = 2008-05-17
last = Saylor's HRT 211 / 212
first = Jesse L.
format = HTML
work = Plant Encyclopedia
publisher = Michigan State University
] ;"Aphanes arvensis": Field Lady's Mantle or Parsley Piert; it used to be an "Alchemilla" but it has been reclassified as an "Aphanes". Not so popular for cultivation but it has a history of being helpful for relieving diseases of the prostrate.cite book
last = Thompson
first = Henry
authorlink = Sir Henry Thompson, 1st Baronet
title = The Diseases of the prostate
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=o3MsSBTztDQC
accessdate = 2008-05-17
date = 1883
publisher = J. & A. Churchill
pages = 157 pages
chapter = THE TREATMENT OF PHOSTATIC ENLARGEMENT FROM HYPERTROPHY AND SIMPLE TUMOUR
chapterurl = http://books.google.com/books?id=o3MsSBTztDQC&pg=PA86
] ;"Alchemilla alpina": One of the species used by gardeners in rock gardens.

These plants are used as a food plant by some "Lepidoptera" species, including Emperor Moth and Grizzled Skipper.

Horses and sheep like to eat the plant, but it was an unpractical as profitable fodder as the grazing animals will not eat the leaves unless they are dried.

Herbalism

Species of Alchemilla have been widely used in folk medicine throughout Europe,cite web
url = http://www.healthy.net/scr/article.asp?ID=1412
title = Lady's Mantle
accessdate = 2008-05-17
format = HTML
work = What Doctors Don't Tell You
] due to the astringent and styptic properties of the tannins it contains and was formerly considered one of the best wound herbs.

As an astringent Lady's Mantle paradoxically both promotes delayed menstrual flow (an emmenagogue) and reduces abnormally heavy or prolonged menstruation (menorrhagia) or bleeding from the uterus that is not due to menstruation (metrorrhagia). an also has a role to play in easing the changes of the menopause. The same astringency can play a role in the treatment of diarrhea and as a mouthwash for sores and ulcers and as a gargle for laryngitis.

In Sweden, a tincture of the leaves has been given in cases of spasmodic or convulsive diseases, and an old authority states that if placed under the pillow at night, the herb will promote quiet sleep.

Active ingredients: Tannins, consisting mainly of glycosides of ellagic acid; salicylic acid, a trace.

Folklore

The name "alchemilla" ("little magical one") derives from the dew which collects on it - dew being formerly associated with magic. The dew was used as a beauty lotion by country people. Nicholas Culpeper claimed that the juice of this plant could firm up sagging breasts, while pillows stuffed with it could bring on a good sleep, [Howard, Michael. "Traditional Folk Remedies", (Century, 1987); p164] however, M. Grieve quoted Culpeper this way::"Lady's Mantle is very proper for inflamed wounds and to stay bleeding, vomitings, fluxes of all sorts, bruises by falls and ruptures. It is one of the most singular wound herbs and therefore highly prized and praised, used in all wounds inward and outward, to drink a decoction thereof and wash the wounds therewith, or dip tents therein and put them into the wounds which wonderfully drieth up all humidity of the sores and abateth all inflammations thereof. It quickly healeth green wounds, not suffering any corruption to remain behind and cureth old sores, though fistulous and hollow."Perhaps 'all wounds inward and outward' loosely translates into 'sagging breasts'....Fact|date=May 2008


References

Further reading

*"Herbs and Healing Plants of Britain & Europe", Dieter Podlech, Collins, London, 2001 ISBN 0261674056
*cite web
url = http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/groundcovers/directory/ladysmantle.html
title = Lady’s Mantle "Alchemilla vulgaris"
accessdate = 2008-05-18
author = University of Illinois Extension
authorlink = University of Illinois Extension
format = HTML
work = Directory of Groundcovers
publisher = University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

*cite web
url = http://www.uvm.edu/pss/ppp/jan99per.html
title = Perennial of the Month - "Alchemilla mollis"
accessdate = 2008-05-18
author = University of Vermont Extension
authorlink = University of Vermont Extension
year = 1999
month = January
format = HTML
work = Perry's Perennial Pages
publisher = University of Vermont


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Lady's mantle — La dy s man tle (l[=a] d[i^]z m[a^]n t l). (Bot.) A genus of rosaceous herbs ({Alchemilla}), esp. the European {Alchemilla vulgaris}, which has leaves with rounded and finely serrated lobes. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • lady's-mantle — pievinė rasakila statusas T sritis vardynas apibrėžtis Erškėtinių šeimos vaistinis augalas (Alchemilla xanthochlora), paplitęs Europoje. atitikmenys: lot. Alchemilla xanthochlora angl. lady s mantle šaltinis Valstybinės lietuvių kalbos komisijos… …   Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • lady’s mantle — rasakila statusas T sritis vardynas apibrėžtis Erškėtinių (Rosaceae) šeimos augalų gentis (Alchemilla). atitikmenys: lot. Alchemilla angl. lady’s mantle; lion’s foot vok. Frauenmantel; Löwenfuß rus. манжетка lenk. przywrotnik; skrytek …   Dekoratyvinių augalų vardynas

  • lady's-mantle — | ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷| ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ noun (plural lady s mantles) Etymology: after Our Lady, the Virgin Mary : any of several plants of the genus Alchemilla; especially : a common European herb (A. xanthochlora) having stems and petioles densely covered with… …   Useful english dictionary

  • lady's mantle — noun Date: 1548 any of a genus (Alchemilla) of widely distributed perennial herbaceous plants of the rose family; especially one (A. mollis) cultivated as a garden plant for its large circular grayish green hairy leaves and small greenish yellow… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • lady's mantle — ▪ plant genus       any of several herbaceous perennials of the genus Alchemilla, particularly A. vulgaris, within the rose family (Rosaceae). A. vulgaris is widely distributed in Eurasia and has been introduced into North America. It grows up to …   Universalium

  • lady's mantle — noun The herb Alchemilla vulgaris, or any plant in the genus Alchemilla …   Wiktionary

  • lady's mantle — noun a plant with inconspicuous greenish flowers, formerly valued in herbal medicine. [Alchemilla vulgaris.] …   English new terms dictionary

  • lady's mantle — /leɪdiz ˈmæntl/ (say laydeez mantl) noun any of a number of perennial herbs with dense clusters of small green flowers belonging to the genus Alchemilla …  

  • lady's mantle — …   Useful english dictionary

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