Ll B.Z, 
IO34 
Of the Hiftorie ©f Plants. 
The Names. 
It is called in Greekc wgi ■. in Latine,Car*«» 
and Car am : in fhops, fiarni. Simeon Zethy cal- 
leth it Carnabadion : in high- Dutch, and 
&pmmcl : in low-Dutch , Catup faet : in 
French/* Canty : in Italian, Cats : in Spanifh, 
Carmen, and an article being ioyned vnto it, 
Alkarauea : in Englifh, Caruwaie,and the feed 
is called Cartiwaie feed, 
«[j The T emperature. 
The feed of Cam\vaies,as Galen faith, is hot 
and dry in the third degree, and hath a mode- 
rate biting qualitie. 
The Vert lies. 
It confumeth winde,it is delightfull to the 
ftomacke and tafte,it helpetli concoction, pro- 
uoketh vrine, and is mixed with counterpoy- 
fons : the root may be fodden, and eaten as the 
Parfenep or Carrot is. 
The feeds confected, or made with fugar 
into Comfits, are very good for the ftomacke, 
theyhelpedigeftion, prouoke vrine, afTwage 
anddiffolueall windinefTe :to conclude in a 
word, they are anfvverable to Amfe feed in o- 
peration and vertues. 
C arum, fine Cetreum , 
Caruvvaies. 
Cft'VoeMrtl. C 
Chap. 414 . Of zAnnife* 
«jj The Defcription. 
x HT' He ftalke of Annife is round and hollow, diuided into diuers fmall branches, fet with 
I leaues next the ground fomewhat broad and round : thofe that grow higher are more 
* lagged, like thofe of y.ong Parfley, but whiter : on the top of the ftalkes do ftand fpo- 
kie rundles or tufts of white floures, and afterward feed, which hath a pleafant tafte as euerie one 
doth know. 
t 2 This other Annife (whofe vmbels Clufius had out of England from Mailer Morgan the j 
Queenes Apothecarie, and lames Garret ; and which were brought from the Philippines by M r . 
Tho.Candijh in his voyage when he incompalfed the world) is thusdeferibed by Clufius : Thevm- 
bels were lar (T e, no lefie than thofe of the Archangelica, made of diuers thickelliffe fbot-ftalks, , 
each whereof carried not double feed as the common Annife, but more, in a round head fome inch i 
oner, made of cods fet ftar-fafhion, lix, 8, or more, of a dusky colour, wrinkled, diuided into two ij 
equall parts, and open aboue : moft of thefe huskes were empty, yet fome of them contained one J 
fmooth fliining afli-coloured feed, of the bigneffe of that of Orohus ; the tafte andfmell was the :! 
fame with our common Anife feed, wherefore they which fent it to Clufius called it Anife : yet in 
the place where it grew it was called Damor ; for M r . Candifh had the name fo written in the China : 
characters, after their manner ofwriting. $ 
ar The Place. 
It groweth plentifully in Candy, Syria, Egypt, and other countries of the Eaft. I haue often i 
fowne it in my garden, where it hath brought forth his ripe feed when the yeare hath fallen our to > 
be temperate. ■ , 
' ■ . % Tht 
