Project title
The flora of Iraq
About the research project
Oxford Botanic Garden leads an interdivisional project focussed on developing a herbal in collaboration with leading authority on Middle Eastern floras Dr Shahina Ghazanfar of Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and Rana Ibrahim, an Iraqi archaeologist and Artist, Founder and Director of Iraqi Women Art and War (IWAW), also working across GLAM.
Herbal medicine plays a vital role in healthcare in Iraq, with many communities depending entirely upon traditional herbal medicine for the treatment of illnesses. Despite the importance of herbalists in the community, their work is often undocumented, and the rich ethnobotanical heritage of traditional herbal medicine is at risk of being lost.
During periods of war and political turmoil, when communities were reliant on plants for healthcare, the late father of Rana Ibrahim, Jaleel Ibrahim Quragheely, documented the country’s flora and its uses in ethnobotanical medicine. He opened a local practice in 1990 and for six years dispensed herbal medicines to communities for when they were most in need. He compiled a comprehensive herbal flora of the country in three volumes which contain a wealth of information on 834 plants and their traditional uses. Tragically, he was killed during a terrorist attack in 2009. His flora, and its wealth of knowledge and cultural heritage, survive: they were bequeathed to Rana in Syria (the only safe meeting point with her mother in 2011) for safekeeping: now the only surviving copy is in Rana’s care, in Oxford.
Our ongoing work, carried out in collaboration with scientists at Kew, and in Iraq, seeks to authenticate, publish, and disseminate the flora, both in Iraq, where it will be of importance to rural communities, as well as in the UK. Its publication will help safeguard the continuation of traditional Islamic medicine, and its profound importance in the treatment of disease, in areas where due to war, the knowledge of generations has been lost.
Project team
Dr Chris Thorogood (Oxford Botanic Garden and Harcourt Arboretum, University of Oxford)
Dr Shahina Ghazanfar (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew)
Rana Ibrahim (Iraqi Women Art and War (IWAW))
Outputs
A Herbal of Iraq. Editors: Shahina A. Ghazanfar and Chris J. Thorogood. 160 pp. 60 colour botanical paintings. 215 x 160 mm. Hardback, ISBN 978 1 84246 763 3, Kew Publishing, 2022.
Links to further information
Oxford Botanic Garden & Arboretum research projects
Back to GLAM research projects and themes
Eminium spiculatum, a plant used in traditional herbal medicine in Iraq.
Cistanche tubulosa, a plant used in traditional herbal medicine in Iraq.
Glossostemon bruguieri, a plant used in traditional herbal medicine in Iraq