PLANTS CULTIVATED FOR THEIR SUBTERRANEAN PARTS. 65 



There is a Sanskrit name, mahoushouda, 1 become 

 loshoun in Bengali, and to which appears to be related 

 the Hebrew name schoum or schumin? which has pro- 

 duced the Arab thoum or toum. The Basque name bara- 

 tchouria is thought by de Charencey 3 to be allied with 

 Aryan names. In support of his hypothesis I may 

 add that the Berber name, tiskert, is quite different, and 

 that consequently the Iberians seem to have received the 

 plant and its name rather from the Aryans than from 

 their probable ancestors of Northern Africa. The Lettons 

 call it kiplohks, theEsthonians krunslau/c, whence probably 

 the German Knoblauch. The ancient Greek name appears 

 to have been scorodon, in modern Greek scordon. The 

 names given by the Slavs of Illyria are bili and cesan. 

 The Bretons say quinen, 4 the Welsh era/, cenhinnen, or 

 yarlleg, whence the English garlic. The Latin allium 

 has passed into the languages of Latin origin. 5 This 

 great diversity of names intimates a long acquaintance 

 with the plant, and even an ancient cultivation in 

 Western Asia and in Europe. On the other hand, if the 

 species has existed only in the land of the Kirghis, where 

 it is now found, the Aryans might have cultivated it and 

 carried it into India and Europe; but this does not 

 explain the existence of so many Keltic, Slav, Greek, 

 and Latin names which differ from the Sanskrit. To 

 explain this diversity, we must suppose that its original 

 abode extended farther to the west than that known at 

 the present day, an extension anterior to the migrations 

 of the Aryans. 



If the genus Allium were once made, as a whole, the 

 object of such a serious study as that of Gay on some 



Piddington, Index. 



Hiller, Hierophyton ; Rosenmiiller, Sill. Alterthum, vol. iv. 



De Charencey, Actes de la Soc. Phil, 1st March, 1869. 



Davies, Welsh Botanology. 



All these common name3 are found in my dictionary compiled by 

 Moritzi from floras. I could have quoted a larger number, and men- 

 tioned the probable etymologies, as given by philologists Hehn, for 

 instance, in his Kulturpflanzen aus Asien, p. 171 and following; but 

 this is not necessary to show its origin and early cultivation in several 

 different countries. 



F 



