herbcraft

English

Etymology

From herb +‎ -craft.

Pronunciation

Noun

herbcraft (usually uncountable, plural herbcrafts)

  1. The practice, art, or skill of using herbs, especially for medicinal or magical purposes. [from 19th c.]
    Near-synonyms: herbalism, herblore
    • 1835, Gilbert T[homas] Burnett, “Introduction”, in Outlines of Botany,  [], London: Henry Renshaw, page 15:
      (1.) Botany, superseding the ancient Herbcraft, is the name now given to the science which relates to all those inferior ranks of the organic creation called plants, or vegetables.
    • 1858, M[artin] F[arquhar] Tupper, “Dame Margery's Discovery” (chapter X), in Stephan Langton; or, The Days of King John, Guildford: Frank Lasham, page 36:
      For he was a cunning man in herbcraft, was Father Peter, and he knew well the nature of each herb and flower, and their several virtues curative, sedative, stimulative—said virtues very possibly all being quite the reverse: []
    • 1982 February, Jayge Carr, “Reunion”, in Susan M. Schwartz, editor, Hecate's Cauldron, United States: DAW Books, →ISBN, page 227:
      The first stage was simple, for one with knowledge of herbcraft, but had to be done with meticulous care.
    • 1990, Katherine Karr, Dragonspell: The Southern Sea, Grafton Books, →ISBN, page 301:
      ‘I first met you when you were about eight years old,’ Nevyn said. ‘I doubt if you remember. And then once when you were about sixteen, you were very ill of a fever, and I cured you — just with herbcraft, though, not dweomer.’
    • 2017, Carol Goodman, chapter 10, in The Widow's House, William Morrow and Company, →ISBN, page 114:
      “Yes,” Sunny confided shyly. “It helps me when I work on them to give them a story. Griselda, for instance, escaped the Salem witch trials and lived by herself in a cranberry bog for two hundred years—see her cranberry wreath?—before coming back to civilization to share her herbcraft with select acolytes. I based her on one of my teachers at Bailey.”