The word lavender comes from lavare -- to wash. The Romans used it in public baths, in wound care, in the washing of linen. A plant that begins in cleanliness and extends into healing. That extension is the whole history of lavender in European medicine.
Two thousand years of tradition
Roman legions carried lavender across their empire -- for wound care, for water purification, for the management of infections in field conditions. Pliny the Elder (1st century AD) lists its uses: burns, bites, digestive problems, headaches.
Hildegard of Bingen (12th century) describes lavender in her Physica as hot and dry, purifying the air and the heart, strengthening understanding: intellectum hominis sublevat. She recommends it for "an impure mind" -- meaning a cluttered, scattered, agitated state of attention.
The medieval cloister garden always included lavender -- for medicinal use, for perfuming linen, and for the protection it was believed to offer against plague and infection. The "Four Thieves Vinegar" -- a legendary preparation used by thieves who robbed plague victims without contracting the disease -- contains lavender as a central ingredient alongside rosemary, sage, and clove.
Rene-Maurice Gattefosse, the French chemist who coined the term "aromatherapy" in 1937, famously plunged a burned hand into a container of pure lavender essential oil -- observing rapid healing and no infection. His account launched the modern aromatherapy movement.
Botany and varieties
Lavandula angustifolia (syn. L. officinalis, L. vera) -- True Lavender. The most studied and most therapeutically relevant species. Native to the Mediterranean basin, cultivated at altitude (above 700m for best quality essential oil).
L. latifolia -- Spike Lavender. Higher camphor content, more stimulating, traditionally used for pain and infections rather than sleep.
L. x intermedia -- Lavandin. Hybrid of angustifolia and latifolia. Widely cultivated commercially (Provence plateaus). Higher camphor content than angustifolia -- less sedative, more stimulating.
For therapeutic use, L. angustifolia from high-altitude cultivation (Haute-Provence, Bulgaria) gives the cleanest linalool/linalyl acetate ratio. INFUSE works with Provence-origin angustifolia exclusively.
Pharmacology -- linalool and linalyl acetate
Linalool (25-45% of essential oil): terpene alcohol with documented anxiolytic, sedative, and analgesic effects. Acts on GABA-A receptors (similar mechanism to benzodiazepines, without the dependency profile). Also inhibits NMDA receptors (glutamate) -- anti-excitatory action.
Linalyl acetate (25-45%): ester of linalool. Enhances the sedative and anti-anxiety effects. Also anti-inflammatory and antispasmodic.
Camphor (L. angustifolia contains <1%, unlike lavandin): at low levels, contributes to the stimulating edge of lavender without overwhelming the sedative profile.
Clinical validation: a double-blind randomized trial (Woelk & Schlaefke, 2010) compared oral lavender oil capsules (Silexan 80mg) against lorazepam 0.5mg for generalized anxiety disorder. Result: equivalent anxiolytic effect, with Silexan showing better tolerability. This is the strongest clinical evidence for any botanical anxiolytic.
Preparation and use
Infusion (dried flowers): 1 teaspoon in 250ml hot water (not boiling -- 85 degrees), 10 minutes, covered. Mild, floral, slightly bitter. Before sleep or in moments of anxiety.
Essential oil (inhalation): 2-3 drops on a cloth, near the pillow, or in a diffuser. The olfactory route is the fastest -- the limbic system receives the signal before conscious processing.
Essential oil (topical): always diluted in a carrier oil (3-5% maximum). Temples, pulse points, feet. Never neat on skin except small burns (the Gattefosse method) -- and only briefly.
Bath: a handful of dried flowers in a muslin bag, or a few drops of essential oil in a carrier before adding to water.
Red lines
Lavender essential oil is generally well tolerated. Key cautions: do not apply neat to broken skin or mucous membranes. Internal use of essential oil requires professional guidance -- essential oils are concentrated and hepatotoxic at high doses. Pre-pubescent boys: some case reports link topical lavender oil to gynecomastia (hormonal disruption) -- avoid repeated application. Pregnancy: generally considered safe in small amounts aromatically, but internal/therapeutic doses avoided. Not a replacement for medical treatment of anxiety disorders.