Dictionary Definition
gentian n : any of various plants of the family
Gentianaceae especially the genera Gentiana and Gentianella and
Gentianopsis
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any of various herbs of the family Gentianaceae found in temperate and mountainous regions with violet or blue flowers.
- The dried roots and rhizome of a European gentian, Gentiana lutea, used as a tonic.
Derived terms
Translations
Extensive Definition
Gentiana is a genus of flowering
plants belonging to the Gentian family (Gentianaceae),
tribe Gentianeae and monophyletic subtribe Gentianinae. This a
large genus, with about 400 species.
This is a cosmopolitan
genus, occurring in alpine habitats of temperate regions of
Asia, Europe and the
Americas.
Some species also occur in northwest Africa, eastern
Australia
and New
Zealand. They consist of annual, biennial and perennial plants.
Some are evergreen, others are not.
Gentians have opposite leaves that are
sometimes arranged in a basal rosette, and trumpet-shaped flowers that are usually deep
blue or azure, but may vary from white, creamy and yellow to red.
Many species also show considerable polymorphism
with respect to flower color. Typically, blue-flowered species
predominate in the Northern Hemisphere, with red-flowered species
dominant in the Andes (where bird
pollination is probably more heavily favored by natural selection).
White-flowered species are scattered throughout the range of the
genus but dominate in New Zealand. All gentian species have
terminal tubular flowers and most are pentamerous, i.e. with 5
corolla
lobes (petals), and 5
sepals, but 4-7 in some
species. The style is rather short or absent. The corolla shows
folds (= plicae) between the lobes. The ovary is mostly sessile and
has nectary glands.
Gentians are fully hardy and like full sun or
partial shade, and neutral to acid soil that is rich in humus and
well drained. They are popular in rock
gardens.
According to Pliny the
Elder, Gentian is an eponym of Gentius
(180-168 BC), the King of Illyria, said to
have discovered its healing properties. Some species are of
medicinal use and their roots were harvested for the manufacture of
tonic liquor, for instance in France "Suze" or similar liquors.
Gentian is also used as a flavouring, for example in bitters, and the soft drink
"Moxie" which
contains "Gentian Root Extractives".
Species
References
- Lena Struwe (Editor), Victor A. Albert (Editor), Gentianaceae , Cambridge University Press, 2002; ISBN 0521809991
- Gentian Research Network
- Medical Benefits of Gentian
Gentian in Culture
- Gentian roots from the Auvergne region of France are the basis for Gentiane, an apéritif (liquer). Varieties include Suze, created since 1795, at the distillerie Rousseau, Laurens et Moureaux à Maisons-Alfort; Ambroise Labounoux's La Salers, made since 1885 at the Distillerie de la Salers; and L´Avèze, created in 1929 in Auvergne. Picon, made of equal parts gentian root and Cinchona root with sugar syrup and caramel was created by Gaétan Picon, in 1837, when he was stationed in Algeria with the French army. He returned to France in 1871 bringing with him the "first African apéritif."
- Gentian is mentioned in the ninth of Rainer Maria Rilke's Duino Elegies.
- "Gentian" is the title of a short story by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman.
- "Bavarian Gentians" is the name of a poem by D. H. Lawrence.
- It is mentioned multiple times in Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow. Also, a character in the book is named Enzian, which is the German term for Gentian.
- Gentian root is a major flavor component in New England's regionally popular soft drink Moxie.
- Poet William Cullen Bryant has a poem entitled "To the Fringed Gentian."
- Used in Queen's University Engineering traditions.
- The Gentian is referenced in Emily Dickinson's poem number 442: "God made a little Gentian-// It tried- to be a Rose-"
gentian in Bulgarian: Тинтява
gentian in Catalan: Genciana
gentian in Danish: Ensian
gentian in German: Enziane
gentian in Spanish: Gentiana
gentian in Esperanto: Genciano
gentian in Persian: کوشاد
gentian in French: Gentiana
gentian in Upper Sorbian: Baltiski hórkowc
gentian in Italian: Gentiana
gentian in Dutch: Gentiaan
gentian in Japanese: リンドウ
gentian in Polish: Goryczka
gentian in Portuguese: Gentiana
gentian in Russian: Горечавка
gentian in Serbian: Сириштара
gentian in Swedish: Gentianor
gentian in Ukrainian: Тирлич