Gripe Water for Babies

An Ancient Remedy for Colic

Gripe water has been popular and commercially successful since it was first manufactured more than 75 years ago in Europe. But it was routinely prepared and used at home at least 200 years earlier.

Gripe water is centuries old

Gripe Water Use is Centuries Old

In the 1720's, gripe water was already popular in London for infant colic, according to writings of that time. The earliest written histories tell of gripe water's natural ingredients being used to calm digestion in several ancient cultures around the world.

Gripe water was first manufactured in London around 1928. The formula was also copied in India at that time. Both products were successful and are still available today. Earlier gripe water was completely made in the home or by individual doctors.

A Gripe Water Chronology

The use of both Fennel and Ginger, two major ingredients in Baby's Bliss GripeWater liquid, was recorded much earlier in medical history than their use in early "gripe water".

Fennel and ginger are the major ingredients in gripe water

Gripe Water Ingredients in Ancient Greece and Rome

Hippocrates, and later Dioscorides, made fennel an early tradition in Greek health care as a digestive and for weight loss. The ancient Romans also used Fennel and gave it the current technical name. Arabian traders carried ginger root from China and India to ancient Greece and Rome, and tax records from the second century A.D. show that ginger was a source of revenue to the Roman treasury. Its citations in ancient texts go back to the 4th century B.C. The Greeks imported it from the East centuries before Discorides recorded its medicinal uses in the 1st century A.D.

In Other Ancient Cultures

Fennel's therapeutic uses are found in many ancient systems of health care, such as Ayurvedic (ancient Hindu system of medicine), Chinese, and Japanese Kampo.

Ginger is one of only a few herbs with such an extensive health care history. The use of ginger originated in the Orient and spread from there to many of the ancient cultures of Europe and also the Middle East.

Ancient Greek physicians used ginger extensively for conditions such as nausea and digestive problems. It was introduced to North America in the 16th century with the discovery of the New World, where it was used for conditions ranging from indigestion and vomiting to cholera and malaria.

Chinese medical texts from the fourth century B.C. suggest that ginger is effective in easing nausea, diarrhea, stomachaches and other conditions. Chinese sailors chewed ginger rhizome (root) to prevent seasickness.

Ginger and Fennel have a long history of being used for nausea and digestive problems

In Asian health care practices, dried ginger has been used to ease stomach ache, diarrhea, and motion sickness for thousands of years. The Ayurvedic discipline used ginger for flatulent intestinal colic.

In Western Europe - Seventh Century

The pacifying ingredients of the gripe water have been studied in the first European medical schools as early as in the 7th century. When the use of written text was still uncommon, doctors were memorizing useful ingredients by reciting poems. The oldest such school in Western Europe was in Salerno, Italy.