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- From: Michel Fougeres <mf0w+@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Date: Tue, 7 Sep 1993 13:54:27 -0400
- Subject: The Nectar of Delight A-E
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- [intro deleted, minor reformatting -cak]
-
- From the book _Plants of the Gods_:
-
- -----------------------
- The Nectar of Delight
- -----------------------
-
- Tradition in India maintains that the gods sent man the Hemp plant so
- that he might attain delight, courage, and have heightened sexual
- desires. When nectar or Amrita dropped down from heaven, _Cannabis_
- sprouted from it. Another story tells how, when the gods, helped by
- demons, churned the milk ocean to obtain Amrita, one of the resulting
- nectars was _Cannabis_. It was consecrated to Shiva and was Indra's
- favorite drink. After the churning of the ocean, demons attempted to
- gain control of Amrita, but the gods were able to prevent this seizure,
- giving _Cannabis_ the name Vijaya ("victory") to commemorate their
- success. Ever since, this plant of the gods has been held in India to
- bestow supernatural powers on its users.
-
- The partnership of _Cannabis_ and man has existed now probably for ten
- thousand years -- since the discovery of agriculture in the Old World.
- One of our old cultivars, _Cannabis_ has been a five-purpose plant: as
- a source of hempen fibers; for its oil; for its akenes or "seeds,"
- consumed by man for food; for its narcotic properties; and
- therapeutically to treat a wide spectrum of ills in folk medicine and in
- modern pharmacopoeias.
-
- Mainly because of its various uses, _Cannabis_ has been taken to many
- regions around the world. Unusual things hapen to plants after long
- association with man and agriculture. They are grown in new and strange
- environments and often have opportunities to hybridize that are not
- offered in their native habitats. They escape from cultivation and
- frequently become aggressive weeds. They may be changed through human
- selection for characteristics associated with a specific use. Many
- cultivated plants are so changed from their ancestral types that it is
- not possible to unravel their evolutionary history. Such is not the
- case, however, with _Cannabis_. Yet, despite its long history as a
- major crop plant, _Cannabis_ is still characterized more by what is not
- known about its biology than what is known.
-
- The botanical classification of _Cannabis_ has long been uncertain.
- Botanists have not agreed on the family to which _Cannabis_ belongs:
- early investigators put it in the Nettle family (Urticaceae); later it
- was accommodated in the Fig family (Moraceae); the general trend today
- is to assign it to a special family, Cannabaceae, in which only
- _Cannabis_ and _Humulus_, the genus of Hops, are members. There has
- even been disagreement as to how many species of _Cannabis_ exist:
- whether the genus comprises one highly variable species or several
- distinct species. Evidence now strongly indicates that three species
- can be recognized: _C. indica_, _C. ruderalia_, and _C. sativa_. These
- species are distinguished by different growth habits, characters of the
- akenes, and especially by major differences in structure of the wood.
- Although all species possess cannabinols, there may possibly be
- significant chemical differences, but the evidence is not yet available.
-
- We cannot know now which of the several uses of _Cannabis_ was earliest.
- Since plant uses normally proceed from the simpler to the more complex,
- one might presume that its useful fibers first attracted man's
- attention. Indeed remains of hempen fibers have been found in the
- earliest archaeological sites in the cradles of Asiatic civilization:
- evidence of fiber in China dating from 4000 B.C. and hempen rope and
- thread from Turkestan from 3000 B.C. Stone beaters for pounding hemp
- fiber and impressions of hempen cord baked into pottery have been found
- in ancient sites in Taiwan. Hempen fabrics have been found in Turkish
- sites of the late eighth century B.C., and there is a questionable
- specimen of Hemp in an Egyptian tomb dated between three and four
- thousand years ago.
-
- ** Here is a passage about a picture map shown in the text, but not written
- into the article itself:
-
- The original home of _Cannabis_ is thought to be central Asia, but it
- has spread around the globe with the exception of Artic regions and
- areas of wet tropical forests. _Cannabis_ spread at a very early date
- to Africa (except for the humid tropics) and was quickly accepted into
- native pharmacopoeias. The Spaniards took it to Mexico and Peru, the
- French to Canada, the English to North America. It had been introduced
- into northern Europe in Viking times. It was probably the Scythians who
- took it first to China.
-
- **
-
- The Indian vedas sang of _Cannabis_ as one of the divine nectars, able
- to give man anything from good health and long life to visions of the
- gods. The Zend-Avesta of 600 B.C. mentions an intoxicating resin, and
- the Assyrians used _Cannabis_ as an incense as early as the ninth
- century B.C.
-
- Inscriptions from the Chou dynasty in China, dated 700-500 B.C., have a
- "negative" connotation that accompanies the ancient character for
- Cannabis, _Ma_, implying its stupefying properties. Since this idea
- obviously predated writing, the Pen Tsao Ching, written in A.C. 100 but
- going back to a legendary emperor, Shen-Nung, 2000 B.C., may be taken as
- evidence that the Chinese knew and probably used the hallucinogenic
- properties at very early dates. It was said that _Ma-fen_ ("Hemp
- fruit") "if taken to excess, will produce hallucinations [literally,
- `seeing devils']. If taken over a long term, it makes one communicate
- with spirits and lightens one's body." A Taoist priest wrote in the
- fifth century B.C. that _Cannabis_ was employed by "necromancers, in
- combination with Ginseng, to set forward time and reveal future events."
-
- In these early periods, use of _Cannabis_ as an hallucinogen was
- undoubtedly associated with Chinese shamanism, but by the time of
- European contact 1500 years later, shamanism had fallen into decline,
- and the use of the plant for inebriation seems to have ceased and had
- been forgotten. Its value in Chine then was primarily as a fiber
- source. There was, however, a continuous record of Hemp cultivation in
- China from Neolithic times, and it has been suggested that _Cannabis_
- may have originated in China, not in central Asia.
-
- About 500 B.C. the Greek writer Herodotus described a marvelous bath of
- the Scythians, aggressive horsemen who swept out of the Transcaucasus
- eastward and westward. He reported that "they make a booth by fixing in
- the ground three sticks inclined toward one another, and stretching
- around them woollen pelts which they arragne so as to fit as close as
- possible: inside the booth a dish is placed upon the ground into which
- they put a number of red hot stones and then add some Hemp
- seed...immediately it smokes and gives out such a vapor as no Grecian
- vapor bath can exceed; the Scyths, delighted, shout for joy...." Only
- recently, archaeologists have excavated frozen Scythian tombs in central
- Asia, dated between 500 and 300 B.C., and have found tripods and pelts,
- braziers and charcoal with remains of _Cannabis_ leaves and fruit. It
- has generally been accepted that _Cannabis_ originated in central Asia
- and that it was the Scythians who spread it westward to Europe.
-
- While the Greeks and Romans may not generally have taken _Cannabis_ for
- inebriation, there are indications that they were aware of the
- psychoactive effects of the drug. Democritus reported that it was
- occasionally drunk with wine and myrrh to produce visionary states, and
- Galen, about A.D. 200, wrote that it was sometimes customary to give
- Hemp to guests to promote hilarity and enjoyment.
-
- _Cannabis_ arrived in Europe from the north. In classical Greece and
- Rome, it was not cultivated as a fiber plant. Fiber for ropes and
- sails, however, was available to the Romans from Gaul as early as the
- third century B.C. The Roman writer Lucilius mentioned it in 120 B.C.
- Pliny the Elder outlined the preparation and grades of hempen fibers in
- the first century A.C., and hempen rope was found in a Roman site in
- England dated A.D. 140-180. Whether the Vikings used Hemp rope or not
- is not known, but palynological evidence indicates that Hemp cultivation
- had a tremendous increment in England from the early Anglo-Saxon period
- to late Saxon and Norman times -- from 400 to 1100.
-
- Henry VIII fostered the cultivation of Hemp in England. The maritime
- supremacy of England during Elizabethan times greatly increased the
- demand. Hemp cultivation began in the British colonies in the New
- World: first in Canada in 1606, then in Virginia in 1611; the Pilgrims
- took the crop to New England in 1632. In pre-Revolutionary North
- America, Hemp was employed even for making work clothes. Hemp was
- introduced quite independently into Spanish colonies in America: Chile,
- 1545; Peru, 1554.
-
- There is no doubt that hempen fiber production represents an early use
- of _Cannabis_, but perhaps consumption of its edible akenes as food
- predated the discovery of the useful fiber. These akenes are very
- nutritious, and it is difficult to imagine that early man, constantly
- searching for food, would have missed this opportunity. Archaeological
- finds of Hemp akenes in Germany, dated with reservation at 500 B.C.,
- indicate the nutritional use of these plant products. From early times
- to the present, Hemp akenes have been used as food in eastern Europe,
- and in the United States as a major ingredient of bird food.
- The folk-medicinal value of Hemp -- frequently indistinguishable from
- its hallucinogenic properties -- may even be its earliest role as an
- economic plant. The earliest record of the medicinal use of the plant
- is that of the Chinese emperor-herbalist Shen-Nung who, five thousand
- years ago, recommended _Cannabis_ for malaria, beri-beri, constipation,
- rheumatic pains, absent-mindedness, and female disorders. Hoa-Glio,
- another ancient Chinese herbalist, recommended a mixture of Hemp resin
- and wine as an analgesic during surgery.
-
- It was in ancient India that this "gift of the gods" found excessive use
- in folk medicine. It was believed to quicken the mind, prolong life,
- improve judgment, lower fevers, induce sleep, cure dysentery. Because
- of its psychoactive properties it was more highly valued than medicienes
- with only physical activity. Several systems of Indian medicine
- esteemed _Cannabis_. The medical work _Sushruta_ claimed that it
- claimed leprosy. The _Bharaprakasha_ of about A.D. 1600 described it as
- antiphlegmatic, digestive, bile affecting, pungent, and astringent,
- prescribing it to stimulate the appetite, improve digestion, and better
- the voice. The spectrum of medicinal uses in India covered control of
- dandruff and relief of headache, mania, insomnia, venereal disease,
- whooping cough, earaches, and tuberculosis!
-
- The fame of _Cannabis_ as a medicine spread with the plant. In parts of
- Africa, it was valued in treating dysentery, malaria, anthrax, and
- fevers. Even today the Hotentots and Mfengu claim its efficacy in
- treating snake bites, and Sotho women induce partial stupefaction by
- smoking Hemp before childbirth.
-
- Although _Cannabis_ seems not to have been employed in medieval Europe
- as an hallucinogen, it was highly valued in medicine and its therapeutic
- uses can be traced back to early classical physicians such as
- Dioscorides and Galen. Medieval herbalists distinguished "manured
- hempe" (cultivated) from "bastard hempe" (weedy), recommending the
- latter "against nodes and wennes and other hard tumors," the former for
- a host of uses from curing cough to jaundice. They cautioned, however,
- that in excess it might cause sterility, that "it drieth up... the seeds
- of generation" in men "and the milke of women's breasts." An
- interesting use in the sixteenth century -- source of the name Angler's
- Weed in England -- was locally important: "poured into the holes of
- earthworms [it] will draw them forth and...fisherman and anglers have
- use this feate to baite their hooks."
-
- The value of _Cannabis_ in folk medicine has clearly been closely tied
- with its euphoric and hallucinogenic properties, knowledge of which may
- be as old as its use as a source of fiber. Primitive man, trying all
- sorts of plant materials as food, must have known the ecstatic
- hallucinatory effects of Hemp, an intoxication introducing him to an
- other-worldly plant leading to religious beliefs. Thus the plant early
- was viewed as a special gift of the gods, a sacred medium for communion
- with the spirit world.
-
- Although _Cannabis_ today is the most widely employed of the
- hallucinogens, its use purely as a narcotic, except in Asia, appears not
- to be ancient. In classical times its euphoric properties were,
- however, recognized. In Thebes, Hemp was made into a drink said to have
- opium-like properties. Galen reported that cakes with Hemp, if eaten to
- excess, were intoxicating. The use as an inebriant seems to have been
- spread east and west by barbarian hordes of central Asia, especially the
- Scythians, who had a profound cultural influence on early Greece and
- eastern Europe. And knowledge of the intoxicating effects of Hemp goes
- far back in Indian history, as indicated by the deep mythological and
- spiritual beliefs about the plant. One preparation, Bhang, was so
- sacred that it was thought to deter evil, bring luck, and cleanse man of
- sin. Those treading upon the leaves of this holy plant would suffer
- harm or disaster, and sacred oaths were sealed over Hemp. The favorite
- drink of Indra, god of the firmament, was made from _Cannabis_, and the
- Hindu god Shiva commanded that the word Bhangi must be chanted
- repeatedly during sowing, weeding, and harvesting of the holy plant.
- Knowledge and use of the intoxicating properties eventually spread to
- Asia Minor. Hemp was employed as an incense in Assyria in the first
- millennium B.C., suggesting its use as an inebriant. While there is no
- direct mention of Hemp in the Bible, several obscure passages may refer
- tangentially to the effects of _Cannabis_ resin or Hashish.
-
- It is perhaps in the Himalayas of India and the Tibetan plateau that
- _Cannabis_ preparations assumed their greatest hallucinogenic importance
- in religious contexts. Bhang is a mild preparation: dried leaves or
- flowering shoots are pounded with spices into a paste and consumed as
- candy -- known as _maajun_ -- or in tea form. Ganja is made from the
- resin-rich dried pistillate flowering tops of cultivated plants which
- are pressed into a compacted mass and kept under pressure for several
- days to induce chemical changes; most Ganja is smoked, often with
- Tobacco. Charas consists of the resin itself, a brownish mass which is
- employed generally in smoking mixtures.
-
- The Tibetans considered _Cannabis_ sacred. A Mahayana Buddhist
- tradition maintains that during the six steps of asceticism leading to
- his enlightenment, Buddha lived on one Hemp seed a day. He is often
- depicted with "Soma leaves" in his begging bowl and the mysterious
- god-narcotic Soma has occasionally been identified with Hemp. In
- Tantric Buddhism of the Himalayas of Tibet, _Cannabis_ plays a very
- significant role in the meditative ritual used to facilitate deep
- meditation and heigten awareness. Both medicinal and recreational
- secular use of Hemp is likewise so common now in this region that the
- plant is taken from granted as an everyday necessity.
-
- Folklore maintains that the use of Hemp was introduced to Persia by an
- Indian pilgrim during the reign of Khrusu (A.D. 531-579), but it is
- known that the Assyrians used Hemp as an incense during the first
- millennium B.C. Although at first prohibited among Islamic peoples,
- Hashish spread widely west throughout Asia Minor. In 1378, authorities
- tried to extirpate Hemp from Arabian territory by the imposition of
- harsh punishments. As early as 1271, the eating of Hemp was so well
- known that Marco Polo described its consumption in the secret order of
- Hashishins, who used the narcotic to experience the rewards in store for
- them in the afterlife. _Cannabis_ extended early and widely from Asia
- Minor into Africe, partly under the pressure of Islamic influence, but
- the use of Hemp transcends Mohammedan areas. It is widely believed that
- Hemp was introduced also with slaves from Malaya. Commonly known in
- Africa as Kif or Dagga, the plant has entered into primitive native
- cultures in social and religious contexts. The hotentots, Bushmen, and
- Kaffirs used Hemp for centuries as a medicine and as an intoxicant. In
- an ancient tribal ceremony in the Zambesi Valley, participants inhaled
- vapors from a pile of smoldering Hemp; later, reed tubes and pipes were
- employed, and the plant material was burned on an altar. The Kasai
- tribes of the Congo have revived an old Riamba cult in which Hemp,
- replacing ancient fetishes and symbols, was elevated to a god -- a
- protector against physical and spiritual harm. Treaties are sealed with
- puffs of smoke from calabash pipes. Hemp-smoking and Hashish-snuffing
- cults exists in many parts of east Africa, especially near Lake Victoria.
-
- Hemp has spread to many areas of the New World, but with few exceptions
- the plant has not penetrated significantly into many native American
- religious beliefs and ceremonies. There are, however, exceptions such
- as its use under the name Rosa Maria, by the Tepecano Indians of
- northwest Mexico who occasionally employ Hemp whem Peyote is not
- available. It has recently been learned that Indians in the Mexican
- states of Veracruz, Hidalgo, and Puebla practice a communal curing
- ceremony with a plant called Santa Rosa, identified as _Cannabis
- sativa_, which is considered both a plant and a sacred intercessor with
- the Virgin. Although the ceremony is based mainly on Christian
- elements, the plant is worshiped as an earth diety and is thought to be
- alive and to represent a part of the heart of God. The participants in
- this cult believe that the plant can be dangerous and that it can assume
- the form of a man's soul, make him ill, enrage him, and even cause death.
- Sixty years ago, when Mexican laborers introduced the smoking of
- Marihuana to the United States, it spread across the south, and by the
- early 1920s, its use was established in New Orleans, confined primarily
- among the poor and minority groups. The continued spread of the custom
- in the United States and Europe has resulted in a still unresolved
- controversy.
-
- _Cannabis sativa_ was officially in the United States Pharmacopoeia
- until 1937, recommended for a wide variety of disorders, especially as a
- mild sedative. It is no longer an official drug, although research in
- the medical potential of some of the cannabinolic constituents or their
- semi-synthetic analogues is at present very active, particularly in
- relation to the side-effects of cancer therapy.
-
- The psychoactive effects of _Cannabis_ preparations vary widely,
- depending on dosage, the preparation and the type of plant used, the
- method of administration, personality of the user, and social and
- cultural background. Perhaps the most frequent characterisitic is a
- dreamy state. Long forgotten events are often recalled and thoughts
- occur in unrelated sequences. Perception of time, and occasionally of
- space, is altered. Visual and auditory hallucinations follow the use of
- large doses. Euphoria, excitement, inner happiness -- often with
- hilarity and laughter -- are typical. In some cases, a final mood of
- depression may be experienced. While behavior is sometimes impulsive,
- violence or aggression is seldom induced.
-
- In relatively recent years, the use of _Cannabis_ as an intoxicant has
- spread widely in Western society -- especially in the United States and
- Europe -- and has caused apprehension in law-making and law-enforcing
- circles and has created social and health problems. There is still
- little, if any, agreement on the magnitude of these problems or on their
- solution. Opinion appears to be pulled in two directions: that the use
- of _Cannabis_ is an extreme social, moral, and health danger that must
- be stamped out, or that it is an innocuous, pleasant pastime that should
- be legalized. It may be some time before all the truths concerning the
- use in our times and society of this ancient drug are fully known.
- Since an understanding of the history and attitudes of peoples who have
- long used the plant may play a part in furthering our handling of the
- situation in modern society, it behooves us to consider the role of
- _Cannabis_ in man's past and to learn what lessons it can teach us:
- whether to maintain wise restraint in our urbanized, industrialized life
- or to free it for general use. For it appears that _Cannabis_ may be
- with us for a long time.
-
- Picture excerpts:
- This miniature is from a fifteenth-century manuscript of Marco Polo's
- travels depicts the Persian nobleman Al-Hassan ibn-al-Sabbah, who was
- known as the Old Man of the Mountain, enjoying the artificial paradise
- of Hashish eaters. His followers, known as _ashishins_, consumed large
- amounts of _Cannabis_ resin to increase their courage as they
- slaughtered and plundered on behalf of their leader. The words
- _assassin_ and _hashish_ were derived from the name of this band.
-
- The Cuna Indians of Panama use _Cannabis_ as a sacred herb. This mola
- of applique work depicts a Cuna council meeting. An orator is shown
- adressing two headmen, who lounge in their hammocks and listen
- judiciously; one smokes a pipe as he swings. Spectators wander in and
- out, and one man is seen napping on a bench.
-
- The Cora Indians of the Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico smoke
- _Cannabis_ in the course of their sacred ceremonies. Rarely is an
- introduced foreign plant adopted and use in indigenous religious
- ceremonies, but it seems that the Cora of Mexico and the Cuna of Panama
- have taken up the ritual smoking of _Cannabis_, notwithstanding the fact
- that, in both areas, it was brought in by the early Europeans.
-
- In the nineteenth century, a select group of European artists and
- writers turned to psychoactive agents in an attempt to achieve what has
- come to be regarded as "mind-expansion" or "mind-alteration." Many
- people, such as the French poet Baudelaire, believed that creative
- ability could be greatly enhanced by the use of _Cannabis_. In fact,
- Baudelaire wrote vivid descriptions of his personal experiences under
- the influence of _Cannabis_. At the upper left is Gustave Dore's
- painting _Composition on the Death of Gerard de Nerval_, inspired
- probably by the use of _Cannabis_ and Opium. At the upper right is a
- contemporary American cartoon humorously epitomizing the recurrence of
- this belief (it shows caveman around a fire, one saying "Hey, what is
- this stuff? It makes everything I think seem profound."). It was not
- only among the French _literati_ that psychoactive substances raised
- expectations. In 1845, the French psychiatrist Moreau de Tours
- published his investigation of Hashish in a fundamental scientific
- monograph _Du hachisch et de l'alienation mentale_. Moreau de Tours's
- scientific study was on the effects of _Cannabis_. He explored the use
- of this hallucinogen in Egypt and the Near East and experimented
- personally with it an dother psychoactive plant substances. He
- concluded that the effects resemble certain mental disorders and
- suggested that they might be used to induce model psychoses.
-
- This marvelous experience often occurs as if it were the effect of a
- superior and invisible power acting on the person from without....This
- delightful and singular state...gives no advance warning. It is as
- unexpected as a ghost, an intermittent haunting from which we must draw,
- if we are wise, the certainty of a better existence. This acuteness of
- though, this enthusiasm of the senses and the spirit must have appeared
- to man through the ages as the first blessing. _Les Paradis Artificiels_
- Charles Baudelaire
-