the history of medical cannabis

Medicinal & health benefits of cannabis
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duke
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the history of medical cannabis

Post by duke »

link to source https://www.budbuddies.co.uk/history-of ... -cannabis/ and a thanks to jeff ditchfield for sharing :clap:
History of Medical Cannabis
History of medical Cannabis
In part, referenced from: the Medical Cannabis Guidebook by Jeff Ditchfield

In 1972, Archaeologists discovered pottery decorated with hemp cord on the island of Taiwan that suggests that Cannabis was being used since around 8000 BC, making it the earliest recorded use of Cannabis to date. Prior to this discovery, the earliest known use and cultivation of Cannabis was believed to have been in China.
Known in China as ‘Ma’, Cannabis (hemp) was cultivated, both for its nutritional seed and also for the stem’s fibre, which was used for making rope and clothing. Such was its popularity and usefulness that it was the second most important agricultural crop in China.



Around 2800 BC the Chinese Emperor Shen-Nung was experimenting with medicines and earning his title of the father of Chinese Medicine. His knowledge was passed down the generations by word of mouth until the first century AD when his work was included in the medical text ‘Pen-tsao Ching’, including the first written record of the therapeutic use of cannabis.

This text correctly identified the flowering tops of cannabis plants (Ma-fen) as the most useful and potent in making medicines and recommended cannabis for the treatment of ailments such as menstrual fatigue, fevers, arthritis, malaria and also as an analgesic for pain relief.




Chinese Surgeon Hua T’o furthered Shen-Nung’s work in the second century AD, where Cannabis resin, combined with wine (Ma-yo) was used as an anaesthetic when performing painless, complex, surgical procedures, including limb amputations.

Further afield, in Egypt, there was evidence that Cannabis was being used medicinally, as a fumigant, a salve, and also as a suppository, as early as the 16th century BC. Four of the main ancient Egyptian texts are: Ramesseum III Papyrus (1700 BC); Ebers Papyrus (circa. 1500 BC); Berlin Papyrus; (1300 BC) and the Chester Beatty Medical Papyrus VI (1300 BC). Each of these papyruses have positively identified that Cannabis was being used to great benefit.


The use of Cannabis was not just restricted to China; Greek physician and botanist Pedanius Dioscorides wrote about a plant; Cannabis Sativa L., (from the Greek word Kannabis) in his publication, Materia Medica, where he described the plant as being useful in the manufacture of rope, and also reported that the juice of the seeds was effective in the treatment of earaches, as well as for diminishing sexual desire.



Translated and published throughout the world, Dioscorides’ Materia Medica was used as a medical reference resource up until the 16th Century, and was the precursor to modern pharmacopoeias. It remains one of the most influential herbalist books ever produced.

The latest research indicates that cannabis has been utilised in Europe from much earlier than at first thought. Studies by Tengwen Long and Pavel Tarasov of the Free University of Berlin, Germany have identified trends and patterns in prehistoric cannabis use. They report that:
“Central Eurasia’s Yamnaya people – thought to be one of the three key tribes that founded European civilisation ­– dispersed eastwards at this time and are thought to have spread cannabis, and possibly its psychoactive use, throughout Eurasia.
The pollen, fruit and fibres of cannabis have been turning up in Eurasian archaeological digs for decades”

Their studies suggest that cannabis entered the archaeological record of Japan and Eastern Europe at almost exactly the same time, between about 11,500 and 10,200 years ago, Tengwen Long states:
“The cannabis plant seems to have been distributed widely from as early as 10,000 years ago, or even earlier”

The very first law concerning cannabis to be enacted in the America’s was at Jamestown Colony, Virginia in 1619. Far from prohibiting cannabis, the law stated that all farmers were “ordered” to grow Indian hemp seed.
The U.S. Census of 1850 records 8,327 cannabis plantations in excess of 2,000 acres, all producing cannabis hemp for cloth, canvas and rope. Cannabis first appeared in the U.S. Pharmacopoeia in 1851 (3rd edition) and until prohibition was introduced, cannabis was the primary treatment for over 100 separate illnesses and diseases. By the time the 12th edition of the Pharmacopeia was published, cannabis had been officially removed and its use in medical research had been halted”

In the 19th Century, Victorian Doctor W.B. O’Shaughnessy conducted some pioneering research into cannabis extracts and his papers contain the earliest instructions on making cannabis oil. here
ps jeffs book is brilliant and well worth buying,i learned much :bye:
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Re: the history of medical cannabis

Post by Keeno »

Another cool read, thanks Duke.

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