Authors: Marjorie Shaffer
Betel (
Piper betle
) leaves, often called paan, displayed at a market in Kandy, Sri Lanka.
M
ARGOT
G
RANITSAS /
P
HOTO
R
ESEARCHERS,
I
NC.
Peter Mundy's drawing of a pepper garden in Surat in northwestern India.
B
ODLEIAN
L
IBRARY, WITH
PERMISSION
Long pepper (
Piper longum
), preferred by ancient Romans.
G
EOFF
K
IDD /
P
HOTO
R
ESEARCHERS,
I
NC.
Tailed Javanese pepper (
Piper cubeb
)
G
EOFF
K
IDD /
P
HOTO
R
ESEARCHERS,
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NC.
The spice called grains of paradise, melegeuta, or guinea pepper (
Afro
momum melegueta
), native to West Africa, was widely used in Europe during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
G
EOFF
K
IDD /
P
HOTO
R
ESEARCHERS,
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NC.
Allspice, from the plant
Pimenta dioica,
is one of the few spices native to the New World. Columbus believed these berries were peppercorns.
TH F
OTO-
W
ERBUNG /
P
HOTO
R
ESEARCHERS,
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NC.
A drawing of a black peppercorns from the first edition of Charles Lécluse's Latin version of Garcia da Orta's masterwork,
Conversations on the Simples, Drugs and the Medicinal Substances of India
. The book, originally in Portuguese, was published in Goa, India, in 1563.
T
HE
L
U
E
STHER
T. M
ERTZ
L
IBRARY OF
T
HE
N
EW
Y
ORK
B
OTANICAL
G
ARDEN,
B
RONX,
N
EW
Y
ORK
Black pepper (
Piper nigrum
)
S
CIMAT /
P
HOTO
R
ESEARCHERS,
I
NC.
A hand-colored engraving of an Indian betel dealer weighing his goods, published in 1822.
I
MAGE
A
SSET
M
ANAGEMENT
L
TD./
S
UPERSTOCK
Peter Mundy's drawing of an elephant fight in Banda Aceh.
B
ODLEIAN
L
IBRARY, WITH PERMISSION
A drawing from
Linschoten's Itinerario
, published in 1598, features the lush flora of India. Notice the pepper (peeper) vine climbing the palm tree in the far right.
T
HE
H
UNTINGTON
L
IBRARY, WITH PERMISSION