Ancient Apothecary Still Selling Medieval Remedies
February 15, 2010
Ulle Noodapera speaks to a customer in Tallin. (AFP Photo/Raigo Pajula) Related articles
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An ancient pharmacy in the Estonian capital promises a sweet cure for broken hearts: an almond-based concoction dating from medieval times that claims to ease the pangs of love.
“Since the Middle Ages a special marzipan prescription has been prepared and sold here for the heart to relieve the pain of love,” said Ulle Noodapera, a pharmacist at the drug store, which first opened for business in Tallinn’s old town square in 1422.
Some say Raeapteek, which has been in operation for 588 years, is Europe’s oldest pharmacy.
“We keep making the special marzipan because the need for such a medicine has continued over the centuries, and patients with symptoms of love pain keep turning up seeking the cure,” she added.
The ancient recipe is a jealously guarded secret. “It’s not ordinary marzipan, but one made using a medieval prescription containing 72 percent almonds and 28 percent other ingredients that we will not disclose,” Noodapera said.
One dose of the wonder drug weighs 40 grams and costs just over $1. Stepping into Tallinn’s ancient drug store feels like a journey in a time machine. Along with the cure for broken hearts, a room in the store displays many other medieval potions used for centuries for their supposedly miraculous impact.
Most of these remedies are not sold anymore, but the display on old shelves is impressive: dried frogs’ legs, pike’s eyes, powder supposedly from the mythical unicorn, black cat’s blood, the grease of dirty sheep’s wool, pieces of an overseas mummy, dew-worm in oil, burned bees, wolf’s gut and rabbit hearts — the last prescribed to restore sanity.
“We might think it’s funny and ridiculous, but there were always reasons why something was recommended by doctors at that time and sold at the drug store,” Noodapera noted. “For example, those with vision problems were advised to buy valeriana because it was believed that cats — known for very good eyesight — have good vision because they like valeriana,” Noodapera said.
Another item still on sale since the Middle Ages is a lamb’s wool called Rose, meant to ease backaches. The pharmacy also reflects Tallinn’s colorful multinational background over the centuries.
Opened by German physician Johan Molner in 1422, it passed into the hands of a Hungarian doctor named Johann Burchart Belavary de Sykava in 1580 and was run by his family for the next 300 years.
At times, it doubled as an elite club for city fathers where alcohol flowed freely — literally.
In the Middle Ages, Noodapera said, pharmacists also sold alcoholic drinks and convention required they give a certain amount free of charge to city rulers.
In those days, “the drug store also functioned as a kind of closed club for Tallinn city rulers who liked to gather there after meetings at Town Hall, which is still located on the other side of the old town square,” Noodapera said.
Today, the Tallinn pharmacy also deals in modern drugs and pharmaceuticals. For tourists, the best-selling “remedy” is a wine called Klaret made using a medieval recipe, with eight different spices and 14 percent alcohol. A 450 milliliter bottle costs 22 dollars.
Agence France-Presse
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