The Eggplant History

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The Eggplant History



Eggplant (Solanum melongena) is so called because the first varieties known to English-speaking people bore colorful eggshaped fruits.

The Spaniards of the 16th century called eggplants berengenas, or "apples of love," while some of the botanists of northern Europe of the same period called the species Mala insana, or "mad apple," because they thought that eating it would make a person insane. Equally unfounded was the idea in medieval Europe that it had remarkable properties as a love potion.

Eggplant is believed to have originated in the Indian center of plant origins, which includes Assam and Burma. There are many entirely different names for it in ancient Sanskrit, Bengali, and Hindustani, indicating its antiquity in India.

In a secondary center, in China, small-fruited kinds developed that were distinctly different from those of Indian origin.

Although cultivated in India, China, and adjacent areas from remote prehistory, eggplant appears to have been known to the Western World no more than about 1,500 years. The numerous Arabic and North African names for it, and the lack of ancient Greek and Roman names, indicate that it was carried into the Mediterranean area by the Arabs in the so-called Dark Ages, or early Middle Ages. Melongena, now part of the scientific name, was a 16th-century Arabic name for one kind of eggplant.

One of the oldest records about eggplant is in a Chinese book written in the 5th century of our era. The next oldest records are from Arabia in the 9th, 10th, and 12th centuries.

Moors Took Eggplant to Europe

The Moors carried eggplant westward as far as Spain, where it was known in the 12th century or earlier. In northern Europe it was first mentioned by Albert of Cologne in the 13th century, but not until the middle of the 16th century was it well known there.

Yellow and purple varieties were introduced into Germany from Naples about 1550. Fifty years later, white, ash-colored, and brown varieties were also known in Germany, including round, oblong, pearshaped, and long-fruited kinds.

Travelers to India in the 18th century described all of these and also green-fruited and variegated varieties grown by natives there. In 16th-century Europe varieties were known both with and without spines on the stems, leaves, and calyx of the fruits.

The eggplant was among the plants introduced early into America by the Spaniards. It was grown in Brazil before 1650. In the United States purple and white varieties for ornament were described in 1806. Until a mere 50 years ago many varieties of eggplant grown in America were for ornament only.

In this country today we grow only the large purple sorts, but people of other lands, especially in the Orient, prefer varieties with small elongated fruits that can be fried or otherwise cooked whole. In Japan eggplant is the third or fourth most important vegetable (after sweet potato, radish, and perhaps Chinese cabbage).





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