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Sacred herbs : ウィキペディア英語版
Sacred herbs

Herbs are used in many religions – such as in Christianity (myrrh (''Commiphora myrrha''), ague root (''Aletris farinosa'') and frankincense (''Boswellia'' spp)) and in the partially Christianized Anglo-Saxon pagan Nine Herbs Charm. In Hinduism a form of Basil called Tulsi is worshipped as a goddess for its medicinal value since the Vedic times. Many Hindus have a Tulsi plant in front of their houses.
==Europe==

Herbs were also considered sacred in European pagan beliefs.
The best known example is the mistletoe. The European mistletoe, ''Viscum album'', figured prominently in Greek mythology, and is believed to be The Golden Bough of Aeneas, ancestor of the Romans. The Norse god Baldr was killed with mistletoe.
Mistletoe bears fruit at the time of the Winter Solstice, the birth of the new year, and may have been used in solstitial rites in Druidic Britain as a symbol of immortality. In Celtic mythology and in druid rituals, it was considered a remedy for barrenness in animals and an antidote to poison, although the fruits of many mistletoes are actually poisonous if ingested as they contain viscotoxins.
Verbena or Vervain has long been associated with divine and other supernatural forces. It was called "tears of Isis" in Ancient Egypt, and later on "Juno's tears". In Ancient Greece, it was dedicated to Eos Erigineia. In the early Christian era, folk legend stated that Common Vervain (''V. officinalis'') was used to staunch Jesus' wounds after his removal from the cross. It was consequently called "Holy Herb" or (e.g. in Wales) "Devil's bane". The generic name is the Ancient Roman term for sacrificial herbs considered very powerful. Pliny the Elder describes ''verbena'' presented on Jupiter altars; it is not entirely clear if this referred to a ''Verbena'' rather than the general term for prime sacrificial herbs.

Hazlitt's ''Faiths and Folklore'' (1905) quotes Aubrey's ''Miscellanies'' (1721), to wit:
''"Vervain and Dill / Hinder witches from their will."''
In the series of young adult novels ''The Vampire Diaries'', author L. J. Smith uses vervain to protect humans from vampires,〔Sheffield, Rob (April 08, 2010). (Love in Vein: The Vampire Diaries ). Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2010-09-15.〕 in an extension of vervain's fabled magic-suppression powers against witches. In ''The Struggle, Volume II'', the vampire Stefan instructs the human Elena that vervain can "protect you against bewitchment, and it can keep your mind clear if someone is using Powers against you." He tells her how it is prepared and used, "Once I've extracted the oil from the seeds, you can rub it into your skin, or add it to a bath. And you can make the dried leaves into a sachet and carry it with you, or put it under your pillow at night", but gives her an unprepared sprig for protection in the meantime.〔Smith (1991), p. 145〕
Vervain flowers are engraved on ''cimaruta'', Italian anti-''stregheria'' charms. In the 1870 ''The History and Practice of Magic'' by "Paul Christian" (Jean Baptiste Pitois) it is employed in the preparation of a mandragora charm:
Other examples of sacred herbs include valerian, yarrow, hemp, and mugwort.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.ancient-wisdom.co.uk/herbsaz.htm )

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