madder, (genus Rubia), genus of about 80 species of perennial plants in the madder family (Rubiaceae), several of which were once commonly used as a source of dye. Madder species are distributed throughout the Mediterranean region, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. The plants are generally characterized by whorls of lance-shaped leaves covered in clinging hairs and by small yellowish flowers that grow in clusters. Madder species produce a number of phytochemicals, including quinone derivatives, that are of interest to pharmaceutical researchers.
The common madder (Rubia tinctorum), the Indian madder (R. cordifolia), and the wild madder (R. peregrina) were formerly cultivated for a red dye known as alizarin, which was obtained from the ground-up roots. That dye was used for cloth and could be prepared and applied in such a way as to yield pink and purple shades as well as red. The dye properties of the madder root appear to have been known from the earliest historical times; cloth dyed with madder has been found on ancient Egyptian mummies, and madder was used for dying the cloaks of Libyan women in the time of Herodotus (5th century bce). Madder was also employed as a medicinal treatment for amenorrhea (failure to menstruate) in ancient and medieval times. Alizarin stains the bones of animals that feed upon madder plants, and that property was used by 19th-century physiologists to trace bone development and to study the functions of the various cells involved in those processes. In the 1860s researchers discovered how to manufacture alizarin synthetically, and the use of madder as a dyestuff has become mostly limited to artisanal cottage industries.