Amaranth Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
of amaranth]]Amaranth is used as a general term for all members of the plant genus Amaranthus (family Amaranthaceae). The genus contains several well-known garden plants, such as love-lies-bleeding (A. caudatus), a native of India, a vigorous hardy annual, with dark purplish flowers crowded in handsome drooping spikes. Another species A. hypochondriacus, is prince's feather, another Indian annual, with deeply-veined lance-shaped leaves, purple on the under face, and deep crimson flowers densely packed on erect spikes.
The leaves and seeds of Amaranthus species are edible: Amaranthus seed was one of the staple foodstuffs of the Incas, and it is known as kiwicha in the Andes today. The seed was used also by the Aztecs and other Amerindian peoples in Mexico to prepare ritual drinks and foods. To this day, amaranth seeds are toasted much like popcorn and mixed with honey or molasses to make a treat called alegrķa in Mexican Spanish.
Amaranth was used in several Aztec ceremonies, where images of their gods were made with Amaranth mixed with honey. The images were cut to be eaten by the people. This looked like the christian comunion to the catholic priests, so the cultivation of this seed was forbidden for centuries. Amaranth was recovered from wild varieties..
The protein in the seed is particularly well suited to human nutritional needs, and interest in this crop (A. Cruentis and A. hypochondriaca) was revived in the 1970s.
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2 Other things called Amaranth 3 References |
AMARANTH, or AMARANT (from the Gr. amarantos, unwithering), a name chiefly used in poetry, and applied to
certain plants which, from not soon fading, typified immortality. Thus Milton (Paradise Lost, iii. 353) --
It should be noted that the proper spelling of the word is amarant; the more common spelling seems to have come from a hazy notion that the final syllable is the Greek word anthos, "flower," which enters into a vast number of botanical names.
In ancient Greece the amaranth (also called chrusanthemon
and elichrusos) was sacred to Ephesian Artemis. It was
supposed to have special healing properties, and as a symbol of
immortality was used to decorate images of the gods and tombs.
In legend, Amarynthus (a form of Amarantus) was a hunter of
Artemis and king of Euboea; in a village of Amarynthus, of which
he was the eponymous hero, there was a famous temple of Artemis
Amarynthia or Amarysia (Strabo x. 448; Pausan. i. 31, p. 5).
"Globe amaranth" belongs to an allied genus, Gomphrena, and is also a native of India. It is an annual about 18 inches (450 mm) high, with solitary round heads of flowers; the heads are violet from the colour of the bracts which surround the small flowers.
Amaranth wood or Purpleheart is from the unrelated Peltogyne (Fabaceae). It has a unique dark purplish tone to it, and is used decoratively.
Amaranth is a dark red to purple dye once used for colouring food but now banned by the FDA.Myth, Legend and Poetry
Other things called Amaranth
