Long known to residents of the
Indies,
China, and
Africa, this species has had many traditional names. One of the oldest references in
traditional Chinese medicine is in
Bencao Gangmu Shiyi ("Supplement to
Compendium of Materia Medica") where is called jixueteng. The Chinese name literally translates to "stem of chicken's blood" which refers to the red resin present in the stems of several climbing legume shrubs. In the 1820s-1830s Charles Millett, a plant collector and an official with the
East India Company, collected many samples of Millettia while living in
Canton and
Macao. He sent them to the
University of Glasgow's Botanical Garden. In 1834,
Robert Wight and
George Arnott Walker-Arnott, both Scottish botanists, published
Prodromus Florae Peninsulae Indiae Orientalis where the genus
Millettia is first mentioned. The authors named the genus after Charles Millett, incorrectly referring to him as Dr. Charles Millett. Charles Millett of the East India Company has often been confused with Charles Millet, a French
ichthyologist, who was active around the same time. In addition J. A. Millet, a French botanist from the 18th century, is often misattributed as the source.
Robert Sweet states that the genus
Pongamia comes from the
Malabar region in India and is derived from the local word Pongam (most likely from the
Malayalam language).
Pongamia had often been misattributed to
Vent. (1803), but it was preceded by "Pongam
Adans. (1763)", "Galedupa
Lam. (1788)", and "Pungamia
Lam. (1796)" and in accordance with the 1994
Tokyo Code of the
International Code of Botanical Nomenclature, the correct citation was established as "Pongamia Adans. (1763)". In 1981 a proposal to conserve the genus
Millettia and reject the genus
Pongamia was proposed in the journal
Taxon and was ratified in 1988. Most of the species formerly classed in
Pongamia are now included in
Millettia, with the exception of
Pongamia pinnata. == Uses ==