The Ethnobotanical, Therapeutic, and Cultural Dimensions of Aromatic Spices in India: A Comprehensive Synthesis
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59436/jsiane.v6i1.26.2583-2093Keywords:
Ethnobotanical, Therapeutic Cultural, Dimensions, Aromatic Spices, IndiaAbstract
The relationship between the Indian subcontinent and aromatic spices represents a profoundly enduring cultural and botanical phenomenon. For millennia, indigenous and naturalized spices have shaped India's economic paradigms, ethnobotanical knowledge systems, culinary identities, and ritualistic frameworks. This paper presents a comprehensive qualitative meta-synthesis of ten culturally significant spices Turmeric, Cumin, Coriander, Cardamom, Cinnamon, Cloves, Black Pepper, Ginger, Fennel, and Mustard Seeds analyzing their intersectionality across culinary, medicinal, and symbolic domains. By examining the Ayurvedic concept of Upaskar, the historical impact of the global Spice Route, and specific ritual practices such as the Haldi ceremony, this research demonstrates that spices in India are not merely flavorings but multivalent boundary objects. They mediate therapeutic intervention, socio-economic stratification, and divine invocation. The persistent integration of traditional spice knowledge into modern Indian life, despite centuries of colonial disruption and contemporary globalization, highlights the remarkable resilience of this embodied botanical heritage. This study bridges historical ethnobotany, modern pharmacology, and cultural anthropology to underscore the holistic worldview inherent in Indian spice utilization.
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