MEDICINAL PLANTS in Folk Tradition

(Darren Dugan) #1

Reynolds, Sylvia (1993). A botanist’s understanding of the names used for native
Irish plants in the Schools’ Collection, Department of Irish Folklore,Sinsear,
no. 7: 22–9.
Riddelsdell, H. J., G. W. Hedley and W. R. Price (1948).Flora of Gloucestershire.
Arbroath: Buncle.
[Roberts, Mary] (1831).The Annals of My Village.London: Hatchard.
Robinson, D. (1994). Plants and Vikings; everyday life in Viking Age Denmark,
Botanical Journal of Scotland,46: 542–51.
Robinson, F. K. (1876).A Glossary of Words Used in the Neighbourhood of Whitby.
London: Trübner for English Dialect Society.
Roe, Helen M. (1939). Tales, customs and beliefs from Laoghis,Béaloideas,9:
21–35.
Roeder, C. (1897). Contribution to the folk lore of the south of the Isle of Man,
Yn Lioar Manninagh,3: 129–91.
Rollinson, William (1974).Life and Tradition in the Lake District.London: Dent.
Rootsey, Samuel (1834). Observations upon some of the medical plants men-
tioned by Shakspeare,Tr ansactions of the Royal Medico-botanical Society,
1832–3: 83–96.
Rudkin, Ethel H. (1933). Lincolnshire folklore,Folk-lore,44: 189–214.
Rymer, L. (1976). The history and ethnobotany of bracken,Journal of the Linnean
Society, Botany,73: 151–76.
St Clair, Sheila (1971).Folklore of the Ulster People.Cork:Mercier Press.
Salter, Thomas (1849–50). On the cure of epilepsy by the expressed juice of the
Cotyledon Umbilicus,London Medical Gazette,n.s. 8: 367–70; 10: 1025–7.
Sargent, Maud E. (1908). Irish cures and charms,New Ireland Review,29: 287–93.
Shaw, Margaret Fay (1955).Folkways and Folklore of South Uist.London:
Routledge.
Sherratt, A. S. (1991). Sacred and profane substances: the ritual use of narcotics
in later Neolithic Europe, pages 50–64 in P. Garwood et al., eds.,Sacred and
Profane: Proceedings of a Conference on Archaeology, Ritual and Religion.Lon-
don: Oxford University Press.
Short, Edward (1983).I Knew My Place.London and Sydney: Macdonald.
Short, Thomas (1746).Medicina Britannica; or, a Treatise on Such Physical Plants
as Are Generally to Be Found in the Fields or Gardens of Great-Britain.London:
R. Manby.
Simpkins, John Ewart (1914).Examples of Printed Folk-lore Concerning Fife, with
Some Notes on Clackmannan and Kinross-shire.London: Sidgwick and
Jackson.
Simpson, Eva Blantyre (1908).Folk Lore in Lowland Scotland.London: Dent.
Singer, Charles, ed. (1961). Introduction: T. Oswald Cockayne’s Leechdoms, Wort-
cunning and Starcraft of Early England.Ed. 2. 3 vols. London: Holland Press.
Smith, Henry (1817).Flora Sarisburiensis.London: Wilkie.


374 Reference Sources

Free download pdf