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  1. Article: Fischers Lexicon of Slavic beliefs and customs: a previously unknown contribution to the ethnobotany of Ukraine and Poland

    Kujawska, Monika / Łuczaj, Łukasz / Typek, Joanna

    Journal of ethnobiology and ethnomedicine. 2015 Dec., v. 11, no. 1

    2015  

    Abstract: ... published in the first part of the Lexicon of Slavic beliefs and customs, dedicated to plant uses ... western Ukraine, collected in four provinces, 11 counties and 28 localities by Fischers collaborators ... of traditional uses of plants in some countries, e.g. Ukraine, is still fragmentary. The aim of this contribution is ...

    Abstract BACKGROUND: Historical ethnobotanical studies are important, even if they are only descriptive, because they help to throw light on the missing chains needed for diachronic analysis. However, the documentation of traditional uses of plants in some countries, e.g. Ukraine, is still fragmentary. The aim of this contribution is to fill the gap and present a portion of the data set, from western Ukraine, which was collected by Adam Fischer, a Polish ethnographer from Lviv, in the 1930s. These data were originally gathered to be published in the first part of the Lexicon of Slavic beliefs and customs, dedicated to plant uses in traditional Slavonic culture. The idea of writing the Lexicon arose in 1929 during the I Congress of Slavic Philologists in Prague and was intended to be a joint international enterprise, but has never actually been fulfilled. METHODS: In this article we used information from south-eastern Poland at that time – nowadays western Ukraine, collected in four provinces, 11 counties and 28 localities by Fischers collaborators. The majority of the information was accompanied by voucher specimens, which were determined by botanists at the Jan Kazimierz University. These data are still unpublished and stored on filecards in the archives of the Polish Ethnological Society in Wrocław, Poland. In our analysis we applied two indices: one to measure general plant versatility – Use Value, and another regarding medicinal plants – Relative Importance Value. RESULTS: In total, 179 plant taxa used in peasant culture in the western Ukraine in the 1930s were registered. The species which achieved the highest Use Values were: Achillea millefolium, Allium sativum, Vinca minor, Hypericum sp. and Juniperus communis. Among the collected plant names, Polish names dominate (59 %) over clearly Ukrainian and Ruthenian ones (31 %). The remaining 10 % of names were of unclear origin or could have been used by both groups. The most salient use categories were medicinal, followed by ritual – chiefly plants used in church ceremonies, followed by animal wellbeing (veterinary and fodder). However we learn very little about plant management in the peasant culture from the data set. CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of the archival data threw new light on plant use and management in the Galicja region in the interwar period. It also increased our understanding of the central role of plants in spheres such as folk medicine, church ceremonies and animal wellbeing.
    Keywords Achillea millefolium ; Allium sativum ; Hypericum ; Juniperus communis ; Vinca minor ; animal well-being ; business enterprises ; data collection ; ethnobotany ; forage ; medicinal plants ; peasantry ; traditional medicine ; type collections ; Poland ; Ukraine
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2015-12
    Size p. 85.
    Publishing place BioMed Central
    Document type Article
    ISSN 1746-4269
    DOI 10.1186/s13002-015-0073-8
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article: Fischers Plants in folk beliefs and customs: a previously unknown contribution to the ethnobotany of the Polish-Lithuanian-Belarusian borderland

    Kujawska, Monika / Łukasz Łuczaj / Piotr Klepacki

    Journal of ethnobiology and ethnomedicine. 2017 Dec., v. 13, no. 1

    2017  

    Abstract: ... were originally gathered for publication in the first part of the Lexicon of Slavic beliefs and customs ... The overall similarity to plants recorded in western Ukraine within the same project of Fischers is quite low ... The presented ethnobotanical data are a valuable contribution to the ethnobotany of Eastern Europe as a whole ...

    Abstract BACKGROUND: Historical ethnobotanical studies are useful starting points for further diachronic analysis. The aim of this contribution is to present archival data from the Polish-Lithuanian-Belarusian borderland, which were collected by Adam Fischer, a Polish ethnographer from Lviv, in the 1930s. These data were originally gathered for publication in the first part of the Lexicon of Slavic beliefs and customs, dedicated to plant uses in traditional Slavonic culture. It was intended to be a joint international enterprise, but was never actually fulfilled. METHODS: In this article we used information from historical Lithuania (the Great Duchy of Lithuania), nowadays a border region between Poland, Lithuania and Belarus. We applied cultural importance indices such as Use Value, Relative Importance value and Sørensen similarity coefficient, in order to compare our data with a western Ukraine data set from the same research framework. RESULTS: In total, 153 plant taxa were registered as used in peasant culture in the Polish-Lithuanian-Belarusian borderland in the 1930s. The species which achieved the highest Use Values were: Calendula officinalis, Cyanus segetum, Helichrysum arenarium, Betula sp., Prunella vulgaris, and Nuphar lutea or Lilium sp. The most salient use categories were medicinal, followed by food and home garden plants. The overall similarity to plants recorded in western Ukraine within the same project of Fischers is quite low (46%), which may be explained by the partly different flora found in the regions, and a cultural discontinuity, revealed by the difference in species with the highest UV. Moreover, the field collaborators were different in the two regions and may have paid attention to different cultural spheres of use. CONCLUSIONS: The presented ethnobotanical data are a valuable contribution to the ethnobotany of Eastern Europe as a whole. In particular, the presented list of plants may be a rich source for future studies on the ethnobotany of the Polish diaspora in Lithuania, and diachronic studies in north-east Poland and Belarus.
    Keywords Betula ; business enterprises ; Calendula officinalis ; Centaurea ; data collection ; ethnobotany ; flora ; Helichrysum arenarium ; home gardens ; Lilium ; Nuphar lutea ; ornamental plants ; peasantry ; Prunella vulgaris ; Belarus ; Eastern European region ; Lithuania ; Poland ; Ukraine
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2017-12
    Size p. 20.
    Publishing place BioMed Central
    Document type Article
    ISSN 1746-4269
    DOI 10.1186/s13002-017-0149-8
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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