Dragon’s blood | Medicinal Uses, Ancient Rituals & Healing Properties | Britannica (original) (raw)
dragon’s blood, red resin obtained from the fruit of several palms of the genus Daemonorops and used in colouring varnishes and lacquers. Once valued as a medicine in Europe because of its astringent properties, dragon’s blood now is used as a varnish for violins and in photoengraving for preventing undercutting of the printing surface during etching.
Daemonorops draco, a rattan palm native to Malaysia and Indonesia, produces much of the dragon’s blood of commerce. Other sources are Dracaena cinnabari of the island of Socotra, east of Somalia; Dracaena draco of the Canary Islands; Croton draco of Mexico; and Croton lechleri of Peru and Ecuador, where it is used locally to heal wounds and as an astringent.
This article was most recently revised and updated by J.E. Luebering.