also spelled Camboge, hard, brittle gum resin that is obtained from various Southeast Asian trees of the genus Garcinia and is used as a colour vehicle and in medicine. Gamboge is orange to brown in colour and when powdered turns bright yellow. Artists use it as a pigment and as a colouring matter for varnishes. In medicine and veterinary medicine it is a drastic cathartic. On the skin it has a severe irritant effect. Gamboge was probably brought into Europe from the East at the close of the 16th century. Gamboge is obtained principally from G. hanburyi, a dioecious tree with leathery, laurellike leaves, small yellow flowers, and usually square-shaped, four-seeded fruit; it is indigenous to Cambodia and parts of Thailand and southern Vietnam. The tree's juice in its hardened form constitutes gamboge. The juice is contained in ducts in the middle layer of the bark and is procured by making incisions in the bark and then collecting the juice as it exudes.
GAMBOGE
Meaning of GAMBOGE in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012