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In Rome, the laurel plant was dedicated to Apollo, the god in charge of triumph, fine arts, and medicine, who was an archetype of male beauty. Roman emperors, athletes, and victorious warriors wore laurel wreaths on their heads, which were supposed to protect them from lightning and evil forces. However, those wreaths proved ineffective some centuries later when barbarians conquered the Roman Empire.
Contrary to superstition regarding plant properties, the famous Spanish physician Andres de Laguna told of an incident in 1539 in Rome when he was “in the palace of the Duke of Castro, lightning struck a beautiful laurel tree which still today is wounded and broken.” Then he finished, “There is no house strong enough, nor anything effective enough to defend us from God’s judgment.”
Laurel plant leaves contain a volatile essential oil which consists of 45% of cineole; they also contain tannin and a bitter component. The fruits contain 25% of fatty substances: oleic, lauric, palmitic, and linoleic acids. The essential oil is the active ingredient that confers laurel and its medicinal properties. The properties of laurel are as follows:
The cherry laurel is a tree of the Rosaceae family, which features blackberries similar to cherries. Its leaves contain a bitter almond smell and cyanogenic glycosides, which liberate hydrocyanic acid, a poisonous substance. However, when they are distilled, cherry laurel water is obtained. The water has medicinal properties as an antiemetic (against vomiting), soothing, and antispasmodic remedy.
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