Searching for Silphium: An Updated Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Historical Background
2.1. Cyrene and Its Agricultural Hinterland
2.2. Excavations in Cyrenaica
2.3. Sources of Information on Silphium
3. Medical Effects—Real or Imaginary?
3.1. Aphrodisiac
3.2. Contraceptive or Abortifacient
4. Causes of Extinction
4.1. Climate Change
4.2. Overharvesting
4.3. Soil Characteristics
4.4. Polyploid or Hybrid Strains—Apomictic Production
4.5. Nomadic Raids
5. Searching for Silphium
5.1. Alternate Species
5.2. Candidate Plants—Hiding in Plain Sight?
- Ferula tingitana, or giant fennel (though it is not a proper fennel), which grows in today’s Libya. It has potential medical effects including affecting the menstrual cycle [56].
- Thapsia garganica, which belongs to a different genus (Thapsia plants are sometimes referred to as ‘deadly carrots’) but has visual similarities with silphium and pronounced pharmaceutical properties, including as a cancer treatment. Söderling-Brynolf (1970) also suggested this plant, which was called ‘drias’ among peasants in the region of Cyrene and regarded as poisonous for livestock [57]. Interestingly, Thapsia garganica bears a further resemblance to ancient silphium in that it is extremely resistant to seedling propagation and must be micropropagated [58]. Given its distribution in the Gebel Al Akhdar area of Libya, this plant is an increasingly good candidate plant for ancient silphium. In addition, Thapsia garganica (Figure 6) produces fruits in a similar shape to ancient silphium fruits depicted on the earliest silver coins of the Battiad dynasty (Figure 2).
5.3. Underwater Archaeology and the Search for Silphium
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Author | Personal Details | Relevant Information/Quotes |
---|---|---|
Herodotus | Greek, contemporary (with silphium) | Histories, 4.169, Description of Cyrenaica Histories, 4:145–205, Political history |
Hippocrates | Greek, contemporary | Book 7, p. 547, Refers to how silphium can only be grown in Libya |
Aristophanes | Greek, contemporary | Makes reference to silphium in many plays including Birds, Knights, Plutus. It was a fashionable luxury food item in Athens. Served with vinegar (acid) and salt. Possibly personal experience |
Theophrastos | Greek, contemporary | Book 1, p. 165, Discovery of silphium Book 2, pp. 13–21, Description T. uses the term ‘Pherula-like’ in a purely phenotypical way, for unrelated plants. Description: Leaves (maspeton) grow from the ground in spring. They fatten sheep, act as laxative for them. Later, stems emerge. The root should be cut, but not excessively |
Strabo | Greek, contemporary | Geography, 2.2, ‘These zones are remarkable for being extremely arid and sandy, and producing no vegetation with the exception of silphium’ |
Catullus | Roman, late contemporary | Poem 7 (about Lesbia), Refers to silphium-rich Libya in a love poem |
Dioscorides | Greek, lived at time of extinction | Materia Medica, Book 3, The root is surrounded by a black membrane, and the juice went bad quickly, unless sifted with flour. Then it turned pale red and stayed good (as a resin?). No taste of garlic—unlike asafoetida |
Pliny | Roman, lived at the time of extinction | Book 5, p. 547, Describes the inland fields of silphium |
Aretaeus | Greek, late Antiquity | Aret. CA 1.7 Chapter 6, Cure of Tetanus ‘But if the stomach rejects this, give intermediately of the root of silphium an equal dose to the castor, or of myrrh the half of the silphium: all these things are to be drunk with honeyed water. But if there be a good supply of the juice of the silphium from Cyrene, wrap it, to the amount of a tare, in boiled honey, and give it to swallow.’ Aret. CD 1.2 Chapter 2, Cure for Cephalaea ‘The diet in both kinds of the complaint should be light; little drink, water for drink, especially before giving any medicine, complete abstinence from acrid things, such as onions, garlic, the juice of silphium, but not altogether from mustard, for it acrimony, in addition to its being stomachic, is not unpleasant to the head…’ Medical uses |
Athenaeus | Greek, late Antiquity | The Deipnosophists Ath. 14.17 ‘…the servant bastes the fish with vinegar: then there’s Libyan silphium, dried in the genial rays of the midday sun.’ Description of a decadent banquet |
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Briggs, L.; Jakobsson, J. Searching for Silphium: An Updated Review. Heritage 2022, 5, 936-955. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage5020051
Briggs L, Jakobsson J. Searching for Silphium: An Updated Review. Heritage. 2022; 5(2):936-955. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage5020051
Chicago/Turabian StyleBriggs, Lisa, and Jens Jakobsson. 2022. "Searching for Silphium: An Updated Review" Heritage 5, no. 2: 936-955. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage5020051