The exhibition presents plants used in folk medicine and remedies for various illnesses in the 18th and 19th centuries. At that time, medicinal plants provided relief for many ailments when medical help was not available. The exhibition is open from 13th March 2026.
According to an old saying, “If sauna, spirits and tar don’t help, the disease is fatal.” This aptly describes a time when doctors, pharmacies and hospitals were located far away, and even a minor ailment could be life-threatening. Folk medicine at that time relied primarily on brännvin – a strong distilled alcohol – and a variety of medicinal plants, which it was advisable to keep on hand.
Plants as remedies for a range of ailments
During the Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century, plant and garden culture spread from university utility gardens to manors and parsonages, and gradually also to the common people. Medicinal plants were dried, boiled into herbal drinks, infused in alcohol or mixed into ointments. For example, wormwood, yarrow, juniper and chamomile were versatile general remedies.
Plants often had other names according to their folk uses. For example, coltsfoot was called “coughwort”, and mezereon berries, used to treat childhood rickets, were known as “rickets berries” (riidenmarja). The exhibition presents both familiar and lesser-known plants and explains their significance in folk medicine.
Medical knowledge for the public
Priests played an important role in educating the public about health, but newspapers and household guides also disseminated up-to-date information. Health-related information was also spread by relatives and friends.
The main sources used in the exhibition are health guides from the period. Elias Lönnrot's Suomalaisen talonpojan koti-lääkäri (The Peasant’s Manual of Domestic Medicine), published in 1839, was extremely popular at the time, and many of its instructions have proven to be surprisingly durable. In contrast, Christfried Ganander's guide Maan Miehen Huone ja Koti Aptheekki (The Country Man's Household and Home Pharmacy), published in 1788, retains elements of the period’s traditional beliefs and pre-modern medical views.
Programme for the exhibition opening weekend
- Lecture on 14 March at 2 p.m.
Aaja Peura, museum gardener at Turku City Museum, will talk about the medicinal plants featured in the exhibition and their current uses. Registration for the lecture via qwensel.fi
- Healing Plants painting workshop 15 March at 12–4 p.m.
The painting workshop will draw inspiration from folk medicine plants and historical plant illustrations, and participants will create their own plant illustrations by using watercolours. No advance registration required.
Läntinen Rantakatu 13b, Turku.
Due to the renovation of the City Hall, the entrance to the museum is only from Läntinen Rantakatu (Läntinen Rantakatu 13 b). The entrance from Linnankatu is closed.