γλαβρήνη

From LSJ

καὶ ὑποθέμενος κατὰ τῆς κεφαλῆς φέρειν τὰς πληγάς, ὡς ἐν ἐκείνῃ τοῦ τε κακοῦ τοῦ πρὸς ἀνθρώπους → and having instructed them to bring their blows against the head, seeing that the harm to humans ... (Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews 1.50)

Source

Spanish (DGE)

-ης, ἡ bot., cret. peonía Poet.de herb.151.

Frisk Etymological English

Grammatical information: f.
Meaning: Cretan plant name (unknown poet IIIp) [Frisk III, not in LSJ]
Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]
Etymology: Neumann Europa, FS Grumach (1967) 229-235. Prob. a local name, i.e. Pre-Greek.

Translations

peony

Albanian: lulegjake, bozhure; Armenian: քաջվարդ, պիոն; Azerbaijani: pion; Belarusian: півоня; Bulgarian: божур; Catalan: peònia; Chechen: цӏен лерг; Chinese Cantonese: 牡丹; Mandarin: 牡丹; Chuvash: пион; Crimean Tatar: şaqayıq; Czech: pivoňka; Danish: pæon; Dutch: pioen, pioenroos; Estonian: pojeng; Finnish: pioni; French: pivoine; Galician: peonia; Georgian: იორდასალამი; German: Pfingstrose, Päonie; Greek: παιωνία; Ancient Greek: ἀγλαόφαντον, ἀγλαοφῶτις, αἰμαγωγόν, ἀλφαιωνία, ἀλφαωνιά, ἀλφαωνία, γλαβρήνη, γλαοφώτη, γλυκυσίδη, γλυκυσίδιον, γλυκυσῖτις, δάκτυλοι Ἰδαῖοι, διχόμηνος, τὸ διχότομον, διχότομον, Ἑκατεία, ἐφιαλτεία, ἐφιαλτία, ἐφιάλτιον, θεοδόνιον, θεοδώνιον, κυνόσπαστος, μήνιον, ὀροβάδιον, ὀρόβαξ, παιωνία, σελήνιον, σεληνόγονον, σεληνόγονος; Hebrew: אַדְמוֹנִית‎; Hungarian: bazsarózsa; Italian: peonia; Japanese: 牡丹, ボタン; Kashubian: bùjón; Kazakh: таушымылдық, шұғынық, сәлдегүл; Korean: 모란; Kyrgyz: пион; Latin: paeonia; Latvian: peonija; Lithuanian: bijūnas; Macedonian: божур; Mongolian: цээнэ цэцэг; Norman: pâsse-rose; Polish: piwonia, peonia; Portuguese: peônia, peónia; Romanian: bujor; Russian: пион; Serbo-Croatian: божур, božur; Slovene: potonika; Spanish: peonía; Swedish: pion; Tatar: пион, чалма чәчәк, чалмабаш; Thai: โบตั๋น; Turkish: şakayık; Ukrainian: півонія; Uzbek: sallagul; Vietnamese: mẫu đơn