Home1842 Edition

CORN

Volume 7 · 291 words · 1842 Edition

the grain or seeds of plants separated from the spica or ear, and used for making bread.

There are several species of corn, such as wheat, rye, barley, millet and rice, oats, maize, and lentils, peas, and a number of other kinds, each of which has its peculiar qualities and usefulness. Egypt was anciently the most fertile of all countries in corn. This appears both from sacred and profane history. It supplied a considerable part of the people subject to the Roman empire, and was called the dry nurse of Rome and Italy. Ceres has the credit of being the first who showed the use of corn, on which account she was placed among the gods; others attribute the honour to Triptolemus; whilst others again share it between the two, making Ceres the first discoverer, and Triptolemus the first planter and cultivator of corn. Diodorus Siculus ascribes the whole to Isis; in which, as Polydore Virgil observes, he does not differ from other authors, Isis and Ceres being in reality the same person. The Athenians pretend it was among them that the art took its rise; and the Cretans or Candioti, Sicilians, and Egyptians, also lay claim to the distinction. Some think the title of the Sicilians best supported, Sicily being the country of Ceres; and it is alleged that she did not teach the secret to the Athenians till she had first instructed her own compatriots. Others say that Ceres passed first into Attica, thence into Crete, and last of all into Sicily. Many of the learned, however, maintain that it was in Egypt that the art of cultivating corn first began; and it is certain there was corn in Egypt and the East long before the time of Ceres.