T heatrum ‘Botanicum . 
vations oiveth a very briefeTtouch thereof, and the figure withall. calling it Adeem $fiimma\terumhal,ct,m. Bats. 
hi„ M and Tabermmtanm call it Adeem adsdterinum ; the lad is fird remembre d by Gejner in hinis, art then by Ca 
mcrarr.a, who call it tJMnttelina, from the name Adutrj ot Adutseten, whereby the germar.es, He/vet,.ms,anc 
others did call it. 'Bauhintu in his Matthiolm and Pinax, calleth it <JWeem Alpsnsim umbcUapmpt,,afeente ant 
maketh a doubt if it be not the®«»cnr MonUr.m of Clepm, which in my mine opinion it eannot be, for that C/a. 
fill faith, the leaves of that Damns is like Scjeltpratenjx, and the (cede is at (mail as Patfley, in both which thi! 
Muttelina dift'ereth from it, although it feeme to agree in the purplich utnbell, and fomewhatin the roote: tht 
Arabians call it Me, the Italians CAfeo & Imperatrix as Mattfnalw faith, but that name is given by the vulgar 
Italians to Angelica, and many other plants that ate of any efpeciallvcrrue, as / laith : the Spaniards inctlai 
andStJlre of iome, the French Adeem, the Germans Beervfsris', 
The Verities. 
Gdten faith that the rootes of Spignell are hot in the third degree, and dry in the fecond, whereby it is availed 
able to provoke urine and womens courfes.and the paines in tht kidnies and bladder ;but if more thereof be taken 
thin is fic and convenient it caufeth head-ach,for by fending the hot vapours to the head, it is thereby moved and 
hurt; the rootes of Adeem or Spignell (for no pai telle of the plant is of ulc unto us, and yet the feede rs veryaro* 
maticall) boyled in wine or water anddrunke, helptth the drangury, and (loppings of the urine, thewinde, 
fwelhngs and paines in the domacke, the paines of the mother, and all joynt-aches.-if the powder of the rootes be 
mixed with honey, and the fame taken as a Lohocor licking medicine itbreaketh tough flegme,and orieth upthd 
rheume that falleth on the lungs the rootes are accounted very efifeftuall againfh the fling or biting of any vene-< 
mous creature, and is one of the insredients into Adith'idatHmindThcriaca Andromachi, which ate eipeciall an-: 
tidotes for the fame, and many other effeftuallpurpofcs. 
Chap. IX. 
gin Adam. Strange Chervill. 
HaVe two forts of this Chervill ihit properly belong to this Divifion or Order, and there 
are two more which might (c referred to the other Divifions of thefe umbelliferous! 
plants which Ididingu(bed in tl e beginning, yet for rhe names fake, I would not willingly 
exclude them the family, but let themkeepe company with the red at this time. 
I. Gingidinm verutr five Syriacam. 1 he tree Qtngldium or Orange Chervill. 
_ The true Ging-Jium that %asmo/fiiu faw in Syria greweth up with an tiprightflalke fomc- 
Isf * I. * * 4 5 •HkSS .fa %% what rou^h, branching forth from the very ground aimed, whereon are let lundry dalkesof 
fine cut leaves, fmaller than Fennell, efpecially thole on the Ualkes and branches, for the low eft arc a little broa- 
yrfntga Gingidium appeUatftm* 
4. Gingidtum Inti folium Syriaium, 
Broad leafed Chervill of siria. 
