Vervain properties

Verbena officinalis, plant characteristics, composition and uses

Habitat: on the edges of roads and highways, uncultivated lands or grasslands between 0-1500 meters. Abundant throughout Europe, Asia, and Africa in soils with a certain humidity. Naturalized in America.

Description of vervain

ilustrationBotanical illustration of the plant

Verbena is a perennial plant of the Verbenaceae famil, up to 75 cm in height.

Stems erect with internodes very far apart, with four well-marked angles. Opposite branches, open each pair forming a V with the lower vertex attached to the stem.

Opposite leaves, the lower ones rhomboidal, very divided with lobes that almost reach the main nerve, divided lobes, dentate. Upper leaves very small and sparse, sessile, with many fewer divisions.

Very small flowers of pink lilac, grouped in inflorescences in the form of spikes of about 8 to 12 cm in length. Each flower about 4 to 5 mm in length, with the corolla practically twice as long as the calyx, bilabiate, with five flat lobes and short tube. Both the calyx and the corolla hairy.

Each flower contains 4 fruits , reddish brown with well marked ribs.

Vervain flower Vervain flower

Components of verbena

  • Acids: Caffeic acid (leaves), ursolic acid (plant)
  • Artemitin (plant)
  • Carbohydrates: fibers (mucilages), sugars: stachyose (mainly the root and stem)
  • Alkaloids: contains a bitter principle (adenosibo)
  • Iridescent glycosides: aucubin, verbenalol, verbenin, verbenone and hastatoside (plant), verbenalin (the whole plant, but the flowers in greater quantity).
  • Tannins: (plant)
  • Enzymes: emulsin, invertin (flowers)
  • Phytosterols: alphasitosterol (plant)
  • Essential oil: citral, terpenene, lupeol, verbenone (plant)
  • Vitamins: vitamin A in the form of betacarotene, vitamin C and vitamin B (leaves)

USES OF VERBENA OFFICINALIS

Traditional use: Medicinal and magical properties of vervain

The use of verbena in ancient times is widely spread. The same Dioscorides called it Hierobolane (= sacred grass). At that time, it was considered that the verbena was able to cure more than 30 diseases, such as gout, paralysis, headaches, jaundice, etc.

However, since ancient times, verbena was known more for its supernatural properties to bring peace than for its therapeutic properties. The ancients thought that the people who carried with them a twig of this plant aroused feelings of trust and good disposition on the part of others.

Vervain flower photo Vervain flower photo

It was a plant very venerated by the druids who used it as a magical plant in their ceremonies. A common custom was to meet at sundown and, in a circle, those present buried it with a sword on the ground as a sign of gratitude for the gifts received.

The Greeks and the Romans called it Herba sacra, ( = “sacred herb”). They used it frequently in rites to throw luck, for omens , to defame or to purify people. But, above all, it was a symbol of peace, friendship and happiness. On the first day of the year they sent her friends to wish them fortune and express their good wishes. When an emissary was sent to another city he was given a bunch of verbena.

The Romans, when they sent an emissary for a noble mission, offered him a bunch of verbena. This emissary was known as a verbenario (that is to say, the one who brings vervain).

The tradition of considering verbena with special properties was adopted by Christianity. It is considered that Jesus stepped on this plant on his ascension to Mount Calvary, endowing it with magical properties against the bites of snakes and other poisonous reptiles.

The great revolutionary physician Paracelsus (1493-1591) considered it a magical plant with stimulating properties. During this same century, in Germany it was widely used as a plant with magical powers. On the night of San Juan, they hung it around their necks and danced around the bonfire. So, it is not strange that in many places of Spain it is still known as “Hierba de San Juan”, “yerbuca de San Juan” or that in Asturias (Spain) the following saying is said:

“The one who takes vervain the morning of Saint John will not be stung by any snake or no bug will do him/her any wrong

For this same application, for a long time, shepherds from the south of France took a piece of verbena to protect them.

The medical, miraculous or magical properties of verbena have been widely recognized in many parts of the world. In the year 1852, for example, Nicolás Jean Baptiste Gaston Guibourt, professor at the School of Pharmacy in Paris, writes in his Natural History of Simple Drugs:

“The officinal vervain has the fibrous and perennial root from which come a portion of thin stems rough tetragons at angles of 3 to 60 centimeters in height with oblong leaves that form a petiole, the lower dentate ones in the middle and upper ones deeply split . The flowers are very small of violet pale color almost seated alternate located in the superior part of the stems and of the branches in long filiform ears. This plant has enjoyed formerly of great reputation and served in diverse religious acts of many towns and in the superstitious practices of magicians and sorcerers, so it was called sacred yerba. “

Uses of vervain nowadays

At present, the importance of Verbena officinalis has declined considerably. When the word “Verbena” is mentioned Spanish people, for example, think more about the meaning of a night party ( Verbena de San Juan = St John’s night party) than in the original meaning of verbena as a medicinal grass: the Celtic word “ferfaen” (= the one that ejects the stones) or the Latin word “herba veneris” (= Grass of Venus).

The truth is that the latin word verbena (= party) is the one that derives from Verbena (= plant) and not vice versa. In French it still preserves the original meaning, since the word “verveine” aplies only to the medicinal plant.

In spite of this, Verbena officinalis does not stop being less important from the phytotherapeutic point of view. Although it is no longer considered a “curing” plant as in the past, it is worth taking into account its medicinal properties.

punto rojoMore information on vervain.

This article was endorsed by Elisenda Carballido - Dietitian nutritionist. Postgraduate in Phytotherapy and master in Nutrition and Metabolism.
Editorial
Written by Editorial Botanical-online team in charge of content writing

7 March, 2022

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