The Romans used an infamous narcotic plant — but was it for painkilling or for pleasure?

Black henbane flower. Image via Wiki Commons

A narcotic plant found in a hollowed bone is shedding new light on Roman civilization. Black henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) is a well known plant to biologists. It grows in Europe and Asia and is related to tobacco and the extremely toxic nightshade. Given its relatives, it’s not surprising then that black henbane can be used both as a narcotic and as a psychoactive substance.

Archaeologists are also quite familiar with the substance as they’ve been finding it at all sorts of sites, including Roman sites. It’s a tantalizing find: on one hand, you really want to infer that the Romans were using this plant for its properties, but on the other hand, the plant also grows naturally in the area so the seeds could have just spread naturally. Now, however, conclusive evidence has been found: a stash of seeds hidden in a hollowed bone.

“Since the plant can grow naturally in and around settlements, its seeds can end up in archaeological sites naturally, without intervention by humans,” says lead author of the research, Dr Maaike Groot from the Freie Universität Berlin. “This is why it is usually classed among wild plants/weeds in archaeobotanical studies.”

Groot and colleagues were working at a rural Roman settlement called Houten-Castellum, in what is today the Netherlands. Like in other areas, they were finding all sorts of black henbane seeds. But unlike other sites, they found what is clearly a stash: a hollowed bone.

A very unusual stash

The bone stash with plug and seeds. Image credits: Groot et al (2024).

The bone container, a hollowed-out sheep or goat femur sealed with birch-bark tar, contained hundreds of black henbane seeds. This find, along with an inflorescence of black henbane found nearby, suggests that the plant held significant importance to the inhabitants of Houten-Castellum.

“The find is unique and provides unmistakable proof for the intentional use of black henbane seeds in the Roman Netherlands”, states Groot.

The association of black henbane with other medicinal plants in archaeological contexts further supports its intentional use. For example, at the Roman fortress hospital in Neuss, Germany, black henbane seeds were found alongside fenugreek, vervain, common centaury, common St. John’s wort, dill, and coriander. This suggests a systematic use of these plants for their therapeutic properties.

“Our study contributes to the discussion of how to distinguish between a weed naturally ending up in archaeobotanical assemblages and a plant intentionally used by people”, Groot adds. “We argue that future finds of black henbane should be studied by taking into account the context of the find and its relation to other medicinal plants.”

Bone, plants, and history

Apothecary preparation of black henbane in 19th century Germany. Nowadays, the plant is rarely used. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

The bone cylinder, approximately 7 cm (3 in) in length, was intentionally worked at both ends and sealed with a plug of birch-bark tar. The seeds inside were identified as black henbane, and the container likely held over 1,000 seeds originally. The analysis of the plug revealed the presence of birch-bark tar, a material used since the Middle Palaeolithic for hafting tools and sealing pottery.

The bone container was discovered in a water pit dated to AD 70–100, alongside a partial cow skeleton and fragments of a quern stone. Archaeologists believe these objects are a part of an abandonment offering — a ritual deposit of objects or materials made when a site or structure is intentionally abandoned or decommissioned. This indicates a ritualistic element to the deposition of the black henbane seeds.

However, Classical writers such as Pliny the Elder discussed the plant’s medicinal applications, suggesting that it would have been used medicinally rather than recreationally in the Roman world. It’s not clear if this included a ritualistic component or if the two uses were separate. However, it’s striking that such Roman practices described in today’s Italy were spread all the way to the rural communities at the Roman Empire’s periphery.

We still don’t know exactly why and how the plant was used — but, at the very least, we know that it was used. The Houten-Castellum discovery is a testament to the complex relationship between humans and plants and the ways in which ancient societies harnessed natural resources for a variety of purposes. Black henbane, nowadays often dismissed as a common weed, can reveal much about the medical and ritual practices of ancient cultures.

The study was published in the journal Antiquity.

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