Spikenard
Related Category: Plants
(spīk´närd), name for several plants. The biblical spikenard, or nard, was a costly aromatic ointment, preserved in alabaster boxes, whose chief ingredient is believed to have been derived from
Nardostachys grandiflora (or
N. jatamansi), a plant of the family Valerianaceae (
valerian family). Such was the precious box of ointment that Mary Magdalen broke over Jesus' feet. The American spikenard, or Indian root, is
Aralia racemosa, of the family Araliaceae (
ginseng family). The fragrant rhizome of both of these plants is still sometimes used medicinally. The false Solomon's seal, of the family Liliaceae (
lily family), is sometimes called wild spikenard. Spikenards are all classified in the division
Magnoliophyta but differ in the classes, orders, and families to which they belong.