Memecylon umbellatum

Memecylon umbellatum, commonly known as ironwood, anjani (Tamil), (Malayalam) or alli (Hindi), is a small tree found in India, the Andaman islands and the coastal region of the Deccan.[1] It is also found in Sri Lanka, where it is called blue mist, kora-kaha (Sinhala language) and kurrikaya (Tamil language). The leaves contain a yellow dye, a glucoside, which is used for dyeing the robes of Buddhist monks and for colouring reed mats (Dumbara mats). Medicinally, the leaves are said to have anti-diarrhoeal properties.[2]. Historically, this plant was burnt as fuel in the production of Wootz steel.

Memecylon umbellatum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Myrtales
Family: Melastomataceae
Genus: Memecylon
Species:
M. umbellatum
Binomial name
Memecylon umbellatum

Names

  • Botanical Name : Memecylon umbellatum
  • English : Ironwood
  • Sinhala : කොරකහ (Korakaha)
  • Sanskrit : अंजन (Anjan)
  • Hindi : अंजन (Anjan)
  • Marathi : अंजनी (Anjani)
  • Konkani : काळ्यो आंक्र्यो (Kalleo ankrio)
  • Kannada : ಒಳ್ಳಯ ಕುಡಿ (Ollayakudi)
  • Telugu : అల్లి (Alli)
  • Tamil : காயா (Kaya)
  • Malayalam : കാഞ്ഞാവ് (Kaannaav), കായാമ്പൂ (Kaayaaboo), കാശാവ്‌ (Kasavu)

Description

It is a large shrub or small tree. Its bark and branches are very hard. That is why it is called Ironwood (or possibly because of its important historical role in the production of Wootz steel). Leaves are simple, opposite type. Leaves contain glucose. Flowers are blue coloured and produced in cymose umbels. The fruit is round berry bluish-black in colour. Flowering time is February to March.

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gollark: I found it.
gollark: We *may* require an orbital laser strike.
gollark: It's OBVIOUSLY not magenta or fuchsia. Those would be pinker. It's red, maybe crimson at most.
gollark: That seems like a really bizarre edge case. If you make houses cost mildly more you will also hit this oddly specific hypothetical person.

References

  1. J. K. Grover, S. Yadav, V. Vats (June 2002). "Medicinal plants of India with anti-diabetic potential". Journal of Ethnopharmacology. Ireland: 2002 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. 81 (1): 81–100. doi:10.1016/S0378-8741(02)00059-4. PMID 12020931.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  2. S. R. Kottegoda, Flowers of Sri Lanka, 1994; Colombo: Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka. ISBN 9559086014


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