It’s hard to identify the age of nature’s medicine chest. Plants and trees have been healing aches and pains as well as wounds and scratches for centuries. Oils from the plant kingdom have balanced the central nervous system, healed the intestinal system, and stimulated the circulatory and respiratory systems long before people wrote about those accomplishments. Sage oil is one of those ancient oils that have helped humans function in every time-space reality.
The miraculous properties of sage oil, along with other essential oils, were verbally passed down from generation to generation around the Mediterranean region. Through the years Dioscorides, Galen, and Pliny all recommended sage as a diuretic, and for its hemostatic emmenagogue, and tonic properties.
Before the centuries were marked with double digits, monks kept sage in their medicine cabinets. The Greeks called it “sphakos,” and Romans called it “salvia.” Charlemagne recommended it for cultivation in France decades later, and the British started using it in food recipes before there was a Britain.
Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist, was the first to describe sage in 1753. Salvia officinalis was the official name in those days, but it has been classified under many names since then. The new world woke up in that century, and discovered this powerful herb that could ward off evil spirits, cure snakebites, and increase women’s fertility. That’s what the Romans used the oil for, and the Egyptians used it as a local anesthetic.
During the Middle Ages, sage and three other herbs were combined and used to fight symptoms of the plague, but now sage is grown and harvested all over Europe and other continents. Sage oil and leaves are used for culinary recipes as well as for healing a variety of ailments, which includes controlling excess perspiration.
The National Institute of Herbalists sent out a survey to its members in the UK and asked them to comment on their experiences with sage oil. Forty-nine people responded and forty-seven of them used sage oil in their practice for hot flashes, night sweats as well as for its effect on memory and brain functions
Sage relieved excessive perspiration by over 50% in an unpublished German study. The study was based on a group of people suffering from bouts of heavy sweating, which was brought on by nervous tension and excitement.
Mouth and throat as well as gastrointestinal issues like mouth ulcers, infected gums, dental abscesses, and throat infections are also treated with sage oil. The essential oil of sage is used in aromatherapy to treat salmonella and escherichia coli as well as yeasts infections like Candida albicans and filamentous fungi.
Modern 21st century folks call sage oil ‘the ancient remedy with modern day effectiveness.”





















