/ kalebeul / 2005 / 12 / 10 / smoking mary herbal fumes and disease prevention /
Mare de Déu Fumadora, Mother of God Smoker, is a local name used in Arenys de Mar on Catalonia’s Maresme coast for the day before yesterday’s feast of the Immaculate Conception, la Purísima. According to the much-maligned Jordi Bilbeny, this is the day when children were allowed to smoke by their parents (picture of kiddie smoking):
When I was small I smoked Celtas [a popular brand of cigarettes], which I bought for six pesetas in one of those dispensing machines installed on the street by certain shops, but I also smoked liana and a mixture of tobacco and aniseed stamped into a cane pipe. And I know that prior to that people smoked tobacco mixed with cacao bark and with a mixture of aromatic herbs and mesquite [Prosopis juliflora] which the boys took from the Calisay [a building in Arenys].
No one knows the feast’s origins. Father Josep Palomer, in an article in Vida Parroquial (Parish Life) in December 1948, explained that the tradition came from a gathering at the Chapel of Mercy on the eve of the Immaculate Conception. “It was attended by all Arenys-ians, who let their children got together and smoke cigarettes of Old Man’s Beard [Clematis vitalba], crumble fennel and smoke its seeds rolled in papers. Why? No one knows and it is not recorded anywhere.”
Jordi says elsewhere that Joan Amades in his Costumari Català dates a similar tradition to 8 December 1653, when children apparently smoked aromatic herbs (Amades mentions aniseed and fennel in his time and old man’s beard in 1653) up at the Chapel of the Mother of God of Solitude, on the hill now occupied by the cemetery. He also mentions Palamós as an example of other places where for one day in the year children are allowed to smoke, “a practice possibly used in order to bring rain, by analogy with the black clouds formed by the burning herbs.” This ties in which his notion that the tradition is tied into pre-Christian or Amerindian rites and that it’s a way of talking to the ancestors, and Amades too talked of it as a possible throwback to magic practices. I think Amerindian rites are a red herring, and that there’s a simpler, European explanation.
I’m not exactly a classicist, but I believe that Hippocrates somewhere recommends the medicinal smoking of herbs. This notion reappears in Europe in the Middle Ages and I think that the crucial mention for our purposes is De viribus herbarum. Here’s a brief blurb:
And here’s another, slightly different one:
The main point is that De viribus was widely translated and disseminated following its composition and that in lines 1421-2 it claims that “the smoke of Aristochia dispels demons and exhilarates infants” (Lynn Thorndike, History of Magic & Experimental Science (1923)). Now, various species of Aristolochiaare present in Catalonia, but they are easily confused in terms of their physical appearance and effects with a number of other plants, including species of Clematis (one species of the former is called Aristolochia clematitis). What I would suggest is that in popular medicine generic acidic (Bobby J Ward, A Contemplation Upon Flowers says that beggars used the plant’s acrid leaves to inflict sores on their bodies to obtain compassion, and that it was called Beggar’s herb in English, hierba de los mendigos in Spanish) vinous material became seen as good for kiddies, and that, as with other medicinal herbs, a Marian tag was added to make the scientific pill more acceptable. It would be helpful to this hypothesis if I could think of Castilian or Provençal-Catalan vernacular names that designate generic acidic vinous material. Unfortunately I can’t…)
If this was the basis of the tradition, why would the tradition survive so long? One possibility is that, like other customs such as sardana dancing, it was rediscovered and reinvented in the nineteenth century. Another is that it mutually fertilised with a belief in the curative and sterilising powers of tobacco smoke. Brits may be familiar with Thomas Hearne’s account of compulsory smoking at Eton during the 1721 plague (Faber Book of Smoking):
Support for smoking was general and respectable, and it remained so, even among those sensible Germans. Iain Gately in Tobacco: A Cultural History of How an Exotic Plant Seduced Civilization writes that:
In 1836, M Maurice Ruef, of Strasbourg, published a paper on the health of the workmen in the Royal Manufactories, in which he asserted that:
And in a letter to the journal Notes and queries, published 21 July 1855, William Bates of Birmingham writes that in the 1840s the French government, which had a monopoly of tobacco manufacture, concluded that the 5000 men employed for this purpose:
Getting closer to Barcelona, the NY Times in an article The Trip to Marseilles (published 10/8/1884 and cited in Frank M Snowden, Naples in the Time of Cholera 1884-1911), claims that French doctors smoked cigars continually on wards during the 1884 cholera epidemic to create an infection-proof screen between themselves and patients, and that:
Ian Tyrrell in Deadly Enemies: Tobacco and Its Opponents in Australia writes that smoking was used medically during the Spanish flu epidemic, and I think that’s probably its last appearance: just late enough to remain firmly impacted on popular consciousness, but just long enough ago to be beyond the reach of modern folklorists. The continued Marian association is simple: plaques and chapels all over Catalonia express thanks to the Virgin for rescuing the population from epidemics (and drought) well into the last century.
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