Chamaemelum nobile: Difference between revisions

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|status = wild and cultivated
|status = wild and cultivated
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== Description ==
*Prostrate habit. The form with double flowers is propagated by cuttings.
*Leaves compound with filiform segments.
*Receptacle with paleas between the flowers.


== Popular names ==
== Popular names ==
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== Description ==
*Prostrate habit. The form with double flowers is propagated by cuttings.
*Leaves compound with filiform segments.
*Receptacle with paleas between the flowers.


== Classification ==
== Classification ==
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*Essential oil
*Essential oil
*Food flavoring
*Food flavoring
{{Citation box
|text=''Anthemis nobilis'' Linn. ''Compositae''. CAMOMILE. Europe. Naturalized in Delaware. This plant is largely cultivated for medicinal purposes in France, Germany and Italy. It has long been cultivated in kitchen gardens, an infusion of its flowers serving as a domestic remedy. The flowers are occasionally used in the manufacture of bitter beer and, with wormwood, make to a certain extent a substitute for hops. It has been an inmate of American gardens from an early period. In France it is grown in flower-gardens <ref>Vilmorin ''Fl. Pl. Ter.'' 103. I870. 3rd Ed.</ref>.
<references/>
|author =[[Anthemis (Sturtevant, 1919)|Sturtevant, ''Notes on edible plants'', 1919]].
}}


== References ==
== References ==
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*[[:fr:Camomille (Cazin 1868)|Cazin 1868]] (camomille)
*[[:fr:Camomille (Cazin 1868)|Cazin 1868]] (camomille)


[[Category:Chamaemelum]]
[[Category:Species]]
[[Category:Species]]



Latest revision as of 19:25, 29 September 2025

Chamaemelum nobile (L.) All.

alt=Description of Anthemis nobilis prg 1.jpg picture.
Order Asterales
Family Compositae
Genus Chamaemelum

2n =

Origin : Europe

wild and cultivated

English {{{english}}}
French {{{french}}}



Description

  • Prostrate habit. The form with double flowers is propagated by cuttings.
  • Leaves compound with filiform segments.
  • Receptacle with paleas between the flowers.

Popular names

see general discussion on chamomile.
English Roman chamomile
French camomille romaine

Classification

Chamaemelum nobile (L.) All. (1785)

syn.:

  • Anthemis nobilis L. (1753)

Cultivars

The most commonly cultivated forms have double flowers, with only white ligulate flowers.

dried double flowers

History

drawing from Köhler's Medizinal-Pflanzen

Originating in Europe, this species has spread to North America and Argentina.

Uses

  • Ornamental
  • Human medicine
  • Beverage
  • Essential oil
  • Food flavoring

Anthemis nobilis Linn. Compositae. CAMOMILE. Europe. Naturalized in Delaware. This plant is largely cultivated for medicinal purposes in France, Germany and Italy. It has long been cultivated in kitchen gardens, an infusion of its flowers serving as a domestic remedy. The flowers are occasionally used in the manufacture of bitter beer and, with wormwood, make to a certain extent a substitute for hops. It has been an inmate of American gardens from an early period. In France it is grown in flower-gardens [1].

  1. Vilmorin Fl. Pl. Ter. 103. I870. 3rd Ed.


References

Links