The Bundahishn

Knowledge from the Zand

1897 | 25,140 words

A collection of texts related to Zoroastrian cosmogony and cosmology. The contents focuses on the Zoroastrianism's creation myth, and the first battles of 'Ahura Mazda' and 'Angra Mainyu'. Most of the chapters of the compendium date to the 8th and 9th centuries. The Bundahishn ("Creation"), or Knowledge from the Zand. Translated by E. W...

Chapter XXVII - The Nature Of Plants

On the nature of plants it says in revelation, that, before the coming of the destroyer, vegetation had no thorn and bark about it; and, afterwards, when the destroyer came, it became coated with bark and thorny, for antagonism mingled with every single thing; owing to that cause vegetation is also much mixed with poison, like Bish the height of hemp (kand), that is poisonous, for men when they eat it die.

In like manner even as the animals, with grain of fifty and five species and twelve species of medicinal plants, have arisen from the primeval ox, ten thousand species among the species of principal plants, and a hundred thousand species among ordinary plants have grown from all these seeds of the tree opposed to harm, the many-seeded, which has grown in the wide-formed ocean. When the seeds of all these plants, with those from the primeval ox, have arisen upon it, every year the bird strips that tree and mingles all the seeds in the water; Tishtar seizes them with the rain-water and rains them on to all regions. Near to that tree the white Haoma, the healing and undefiled, has grown at the source of the water of Aredvisur; every one who eats it becomes immortal, and they call it the Gaokerena tree, as it is said that Haoma is expelling death; also in the renovation of the universe they prepare its immortality therefrom; and it is the chief of plants.

These are as many genera of plants as exist:

  • trees and shrubs,
  • fruit-trees,
  • corn,
  • flowers,
  • aromatic herbs,
  • salads,
  • spices,
  • grass,
  • wild plants,
  • medicinal plants,
  • gum plants, and all producing oil,
  • dyes,
  • and clothing.

I will mention them also a second time: all whose fruit is not welcome as food of men, and are perennial (salvar), as the cypress, the plane, the white poplar, the box, and others of this genus, they call trees and shrubs (dar va dirakht).

The produce of everything welcome as food of men, that is perennial, as the date, the myrtle, the lote-plum, the grape, the quince, the apple, the citron, the pomegranate, the peach, the fig, the walnut, the almond, and others in this genus, they call fruit (mivak).

Whatever requires labor with the spade, and is perennial, they call a shrub (dirakht).
Whatever requires that they take its crop through labor, and its root withers away, such as wheat, barley, grain, various kinds of pulse, vetches, and others of this genus, they call corn (jurdak).
Every plant with fragrant leaves, which is cultivated by the hand-labor of men, and is perennial (hamvar), they call an aromatic herb (siparam).
Whatever sweet-scented blossom arises at various seasons through the hand-labor of men, or has a perennial root and blossoms in its season with new shoots and sweet-scented blossoms, as the rose, the narcissus, the jasmine, the dog-rose (nestarun), the tulip, the colocynth (kavastik), the pandanus (kedi), the kamba, the ox-eye (heri), the crocus, the swallow-wort (zarda), the violet, the karda, and others of this genus, they call a flower (gul).
Everything whose sweet-scented fruit, or sweet-scented blossom, arises in its season, without the hand-labor of men, they call a wild plant (vahar or nihal).
Whatever is welcome as food of cattle and beasts of burden they call grass (giyah).
Whatever enters into cakes (pesh-parakiha) they call spices (avzarika).
Whatever is welcome in eating of bread, as torn shoots of the coriander, water-cress (kakij), the leek, and others of this genus, they call salad (terak).
Whatever is like spinning cotton, and others of this genus, they call clothing plants (jamak).
Whatever lentil is greasy, as sesame, dushdang, hemp, zandak, and others of this genus, they call an oil-seed (rokano).
Whatever one can dye clothing with, as saffron, sapan-wood, zachava, vaha, and others of this genus, they call a dye-plant (rag).
Whatever root, or gum, or wood is scented, as frankincense, varasht, kust, sandalwood, cardamom, camphor, orange-scented mint, and others of this genus, they call a scent (bod).
Whatever stickiness comes out from plants they call gummy (zadak).
The timber which proceeds from the trees, when it is either dry or wet, they call wood (chiba).
Every one of all these plants which is so, they call medicinal (daruk).
The principal fruits are of thirty kinds (khaduinak), and ten species (sardak) of them are fit to eat inside and outside, as the fig, the apple, the quince, the citron, the grape, the mulberry, the pear, and others of this kind; ten are fit to eat outside, but not fit to eat inside, as the date, the peach, the white apricot, and others of this kind; those which are fit to eat inside, but not fit to eat outside, are the walnut, the almond, the pomegranate, the coconut, the filbert, the chestnut, the pistachio nut, the vargan, and whatever else of this description are very remarkable.

This, too, it says, that every single flower is appropriate to an angel (Amahraspand), as

the white jasmine (saman) is for Vohuman,
the myrtle and jasmine (yasmin) are Ohrmazd's own,
the mouse-ear (or sweet marjoram) is Ardwahist's own,
the basil-royal is Shahrewar's own,
the musk flower is Spandarmad's,
the lily is Hordad's, the chamba is Amurdad's,
Din-pavan-Adar has the orange-scented mint (vadrang-bod),
Adar has the marigold (adargun), the water-lily is Aban's,
the white marv is Khwarshed's, the ranges is Mah's,
the violet is Tishtar's, the meren is Gosh's,
the karda is Din-pavan-Mihr's, all violets are Mihr's,
the red chrysanthemum (kher) is Srosh's,
the dog-rose (nestran) is Rashn's,
the cockscomb is Frawardin's, the sisebar is Warharan's,
the yellow chrysanthemum is Ram's,
the orange-scented mint is Wad's,
the trigonella is Din-pavan-Din's,
the hundred-petalled rose is Din's,
all kinds of wild flowers (vahar) are Ard's,
Ashtad has all the white Haoma,
the bread-baker's basil is Asman's,
Zamyad has the crocus,
Mahraspand has the flower of Ardashir,
Anagran has this Haoma of the angel Haoma, of three kinds.

It is concerning plants that every single kind with a drop of water on a twig (teh) they should hold four finger-breadths in front of the fire; most of all it is the lotos (kunar) they speak of.
 

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