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- /* Written 7:51 pm May 13, 1992 by cdp:mrosing in peg:norml.hemp */
- /* ---------- "Enc. Britannica 1856 about hemp" ---------- */
- My boss has a copy of the "Encyclopaedia Britannica or
- Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General Literature. Eighth Edition."
- In volume XI is the entry on HEMP. It is so fascinating that it needs
- to be broadcast to a wider audiance. If anyone gets a chance, send a
- copy to Herer, I'm sure he'll love it. I have not put in any editorial
- comments in the main text although I wanted to. Remember while you
- read this that _Cannabis sativa_ is THE TRUE HEMP. (Underlines
- surrounding text indicate italics in the original document.)
-
- ***************************************************************************
- THE
- ENCLCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA,
- OR
- DICTIONARY
- OF
- ARTS, SCIENCES, AND GENERAL LITERATURE.
-
- EIGHTH EDITION.
-
- WITH EXTENSIVE IMPROVEMENTS AND ADDITIONS;
- AND NUMEROUS ENGRAVINGS.
-
- VOLUME XI
-
- LITTLE, BROWN, AND CO., BOSTON, U.S.
- MDCCLVI.
- [The Proprietors of this Work give notice that they reserve the right
- of Translating it.]
-
- (skip to page 311, bottom right to find:)
-
- HEMP, a tough fibre yielded by the large annual plant
- _Cannabis sativa_, of the natural order Cannabinaceae. There are,
- however, several other fibres known in commerce to which the term is
- more or less commonly applied. for example - Jute hemp is obtained
- from _Corchorus capsularis_ and _C. olitorius; Manilla hemp from _Musa
- textilis_; Brown hemp from _Hibiscus canabinus; Pite or Pita hemp from
- several species of agave and aloe; Sunn hemp, Madras hemp, brown
- Bombay hemp and Malabar hemp, from _Crotalaria juncea_; Jubbulpore
- hemp, from _Crotalaria tenuifolia_, and several others.
-
- The true hemp (_Cannabis sativa_) has been recognised as a
- useful plant from a very early period, although probably not of the
- same antiquity as flax. Herodotus is the first writer who mentions
- it (iv. 74), but he speaks of it in a manner which shows it must have
- been then well-known, for he describes the hempen garments made by the
- Thracians as being equal to linen (flax cloth) in fineness. Its use
- for making cordage is noted as early as 200 years B.C. by Moschion,
- who mentions that a large ship, the "syracusia," built by Hiero II,
- was rigged with ropes made from hemp brought from the Rhone.
-
- The original country of the hemp-plant is not positively
- known, but it is generally believed to have been the mountainous
- districts in the extreme north of India, whence it spread westward
- through Europe, and southward through the peninsula of India. Its
- cultivation in each direction had in all probability a different
- object; for it is found to produce under tropical culture an inferior
- fibre, and a powerfully intoxicating drug, but in cold and temperate
- climates it yields an abundance of strong fibres in great perfection
- for textile purposes, and loses its narcotic qualities. The
- similarity of its name in various languages is a strong indication
- that it has taken the course here indicated; thus, in the Sanscrit it
- is called _goni_, _sana_, or _shanapu_; Persic, _canna_; Arabic,
- _kanneh_ or _kinnub; Greek, _kannabis_; Latin, _cannabis_; Italian,
- _canapa_; French, _chanvre_ or _chanbre_; Danish, _kamp_ or _kennep_;
- Lettish and Lithuanian, _kannapes_; Slavonic, _konopi_; Erse,
- _canaib_; Scaninavian, _hampr_; Swedish, _hampa_; German, _hauf_;
- Anglo-Saxon, _haenep_; and English, _hemp_. In India other names are
- applied, indicative of its intoxicating or narcotic powers; thus,
- according to Dr Royle, it is called the "increaser of pleasure," the
- "exciter of desire," the "cementer of friendship," the "causer of the
- reeling gait," the "laughter mover," &c.; and he also suggests that it
- may have been the _nepenthes_ ("assuager of grief") of Homer, given by
- Helen to Telemachus.
-
- The intoxicating properties of hemp reside in a peculiar
- resinous extract naturally secreted by the plant when growing in a hot
- climate. So remarkable is this peculiarity, that botanists until
- lately insisted upon the hemp of India being a distinct species (_C.
- indica_). It is now, however, decided that there is really no
- specific difference, the change being simply climatal.
-
- The secretion is deposited by exudation upon the surface of
- the leaves, the slender branches, and the flowers. According to Dr
- O'Shaughnessy, it is collected during the hot season by men clad in
- leathern dresses, who rush with violence through the hemp fields; the
- resin adheres to their dresses, from which it is scraped off and
- kneaded into lumps which have the appearance of pieces of linseed oil
- cake in colour and texture, and a peculiar and by no means agreeable
- smell. In this state it is called "churrus;" and there are evidently
- several varieties of the substance, as Dr Pereira describes it as
- being "in masses of the shape and size of a hen's egg, or of a small
- lemon, and formed by the adhesion of superimposed elongated pieces. It
- has dull grayish-brown colour, and not much odour;" whereas one
- specimen in the writer's collection differs in being in large
- shapeless fragments of the colour of amber, with the loose friable
- texture of linseed cake, and a heavy unpleasant odour. Another
- specimen has a resinous lustre, a dark brown colour, and is formed
- into an elongated oval shape, but not larger than half a hen's egg.
- This is almost odourless, and is probably the _momeea_ or _waxen
- churrus_, said to be collected with great care by the hand, and to be
- highly prized. The dried plant after it has flowered, and from which
- the churrus has not been removed, is compressed into bundles of
- twenty-four plants each, and is sold in the bazaars of India under the
- name of gunjah. The larger leaves and capsules, without the stalks,
- are also compressed into irregular sized masses, which receive the
- names of bang, subjee, or sidhee, in India. The hashish of the
- Arabians consists of the tops of the small branchlets after
- inflorescence, carefully gathered and dried. Both this and the two
- previously mentioned preparations are extensively used for smoking and
- chewing - the gunjah and bang in India and Persis, and the hashish in
- Africa. When the bushmen of Southern Africa were brought to England,
- they passed much of their time in smoking this narcotic in pipes made
- of the long teeth of alligators, hollowed out for the purpose. Its
- use as a means of intoxication is said to have given rise to our word
- assassin, from the fact that the low Saracen soldiery, called
- _hashashins_, when intoxicated with hashish, were sent into the camps
- of the crusaders for the purpose of killing whomsoever they met, the
- drug rendering them quite regardless of the consequences. The
- physiological effects of the various preparations above mentioned are
- most remarkable, and are unlike every other narcotic at present known.
- It produces inebriation and delirium of decidedly hilarious character,
- inducing violent laughter, jumping and dancing. The writer several
- times witnessed its effects upon the bushmen. After inhaling the
- smoke for some time they rose and began a very slow dance, which was
- gradually quickened until they became perfectly frenzied, and finally
- fell down in a state of complete insensiblity, from which they were a
- considerable time in recovering. Dr O'Shaughnessy relates some most
- remarkable effects of the churrus, particularly its power in producing
- a state of true catalepsy. The same effects do not appear to take
- place upon Europeans, but this point has not yet been fairly tried, as
- the drug evidently suffers some change in its transmission by sea.
-
- But it is not as a narcotic and excitant that the hemp plant
- is most useful to mankind; it is as an advancer rather than a retarder
- of civilization, that its utility is made most manifest. Its great
- value as a textile material, particularly for cordage and canvas, has
- made it eminently useful; and if we were to copy the figurative style
- of the Sanscrit writers, we might with justice call it the
- "accelerator of commerce," and the "spreader of wealth and intellect."
- for ages man has been dependent upon hempen cordage and hempen sails
- for enabling his ships to cross the seas; and in this respect it still
- occupies a most important place in our commercial affairs.
-
- For its valuable fibre hemp is very largely cultivated in
- Europe, but chiefly in Russia and Russian Poland. It undergoes the
- same process for decomposing the parts of the stem as that described
- in the article on FLAX, called _water-retting_, by which the cellular
- tissue of the bark and medulla is destroyed, and the long fibres of
- the woody part are set free. This is not done by simply soaking in
- the waters of ponds and streams, for it requires to be dried both
- previously and subsequently to the retting process; after which it is
- beaten with wooden beetles or mallets, or by an apparatus called a
- _break_ or _brake_ worked by a treddle. Sometimes, however, this
- laborious operation is effected by water or steam-power. Some of the
- finer kinds of hemp are more carefully prepared; the seed is sown
- broad-cast instead of in drills, by which the stems are grown more
- slender and the fibres finer; and after the water-retting each stem is
- taken in the hand, and the epidermis is stripped or _peeled_ off, and
- the reed or boon is then submitted as before mentioned to the
- _breaking_ process. In both cases after _breaking_ the stalks are
- conveyed to the _scutching-mills_, where the separation of the fibres
- is still further effected by rubbing and striking, after which it is
- heckled or hackled - the heckler taking as much as he can conveniently
- hold and drawing it through a number of iron spikes fixed in a board
- forming a kind of comb.
-
- The process called dew-retting, described in the article on
- FLAX, is also adopted for very fine varieties of hemp, such as the
- white crown Marienburg, and the Italian garden hemp; and in Russia and
- Sweden another method called snow-retting is used. After the first
- fall of snow the hemp which has been put up in stacks is spread out
- over the snow, and left to be buried by successive falls. It thus
- remains covered until the snow disappears, and is then sufficiently
- retted.
-
- We have hitherto received the largest quantity of hemp from
- Russia - St Petersburg, Memel, and Riga being the chief ports of
- shipment; but the late war, which put a stop to the supply from this
- source, is likely to produce a beneficial result to our colonies. The
- indefatigable exertions of Dr Royle on behalf of the Indian government
- have led to the knowledge of various fibrous substances which are
- prodeuced in the greatest abundance in our Indian empire, in the
- manufacture of cordage and canvas; so that having been forced into a
- knowledge of our own resources, it is not probable we shall ever be so
- dependent upon Russia in future for this necessary article.
-
- The best substitute appears to be the Caloee or Rheea fibre
- produced by a plant of the nettle tribe (Urticaccae), _Boehmeria
- nivea_. The Rheea fibre can, it is expected, be produced very much
- cheaper than Russian hemp, and it is nearly twice as strong. Hitherto
- hemp has had one great advantage over all other fibres in the
- manufacture of cordage, and it remains to be seen whether the Rheea
- fibre has this qualification. When a hempen rope is worn out, if it
- has not been tarred, it is valuable for making paper; and if it has
- been tarred, it is even more useful for oakum. This is not the case
- certainly with the fine ropes of Manilla hemp (_Musa textilis_),
- which, though stronger than the best Russian hemp, are almost useless
- when worn out. The same may be said of the admirable coir ropes now
- so extensively used for ship's hawsers and other corage exposed to
- water. These ropes are made of the fibres from the husk of the common
- cocoa-nut.
-
- The fibre called New Zealand flax, which is procured from
- the long sword-shaped leaves of _Phormium tenax_, a liliaceous plant,
- has been much recommended of late; but whether from the difficulty of
- preparing it, or from the inadequacy of the supply, it has not yet
- become a regular article of commerce. The epidermis of its leaves is
- more compact and harder than that of the stalks of the plants
- previously mentioned, and this may cause great difficulty both in
- retting and scutching.
-
- We import hemp from Russia, Italy, Holland, Turkey, the East
- Indies, and latterly from the United States. That from America,
- however, is of inferior quality and blackish colour. The East Indian
- hemp is coarse, and is in small hanks plaited about the thickness of a
- man's arm. The Italian hemp is very fine, that variety called
- garden-hemp being the longest of any kind; its superiority is supposed
- to be the result of spade culture in very suitable soil. It is also
- as white and soft as the finest white Russian.
-
- Of the Russian kinds the St Petersburg clean and the Riga
- rein (or clean) are the best for general purposes. The variety called
- white crown Marienburg is remarkably short, white and soft; it is only
- fit for fine canvas.
-
- The quantity of hemp imported into the United Kingdom was-
-
- From Russia | From other countries.
- In 1851.........33,229 tons | In 1851..........31,441 tons
- .. 1852.........26,857 .... | .. 1852..........26,551 ....
- .. 1853.........40,320 .... | .. 1853..........20,619 ....
- .. 1854......... 1,044 .... | .. 1854..........35,927 ....
- .. 1855......... nil. .... | .. 1855..........28,010 ....
-
- The price of Russian hemp has ranged from L38 to L90
- (L=pound) per ton during the last five years, the maximum price being
- caused by the war. Considerable quantities are also raised in England
- and Ireland.
-
- Of the figures just given those relating to Russia may be
- depended upon, but those referring to the imports from other countries
- are by no means satisfactory; for owing to the slovenly manner in
- which our commercial statistics are collected by the government, all
- articles which bear the trade name of hemp are included, such as
- Manilla hemp, and very often even jute.
-
- There is one other useful quality in the hemp plant; it
- produces an abundance of seed, which not only yields a valuable oil,
- but the seed is extensively used in feeding singing birds. As the
- hemp is _diaecious_, only about one half the plants produce seeds; but
- these yield it in such abundance that an acre will yield from three to
- four quarters at about 40s. per quarter. As this is independent of
- the fibre produced it is a profitable crop in countries like Russia
- where the land is not too valuable.
-
- For fuller information upon the subject consult Dr Royle's
- _Illustrations of the Botany of the Himalayan Mountains_, and his
- _Fibrous Plants of India_; Dr. O'Shaughnessy on the _Preparation of
- the Indian Hemp or Gunjah_; and the erudite work _Textrinum
- Antiquorum_, by James Yates, Esq., M.A. (T.C.A.)
-
- *************************************************************************
-
- There are certainly a lot of biases in this entry. Ignoring
- those, there are many items which conflict with what I thought were
- facts. Gunjah instead of ganjuh for example, does anyone know how it's
- actually pronounced in India? Or if the pronunciation has changed in the
- last 140 years? Hope y'all enjoy reading that as much as I did!
-
- Patience, persistence, truth, reality: mgr@anhep2.hep.anl.gov
- Dr. mike UUCP: uunet!pyramid!cdp!mrosing
- IMI, P.O. BOX 2242, Darien IL 60559 bitnet: mrosing@igc.org
-
-
-