Posted on 12/29/2006 4:56:39 PM PST by blam
The wines and herbs in the land of Pan
A survey of ancient Greek sources reveals the surprising properties of certain wines that continue to provoke the curiosity of scholars today
A parody of Circe offering Odysseus wine that contains a magical herb that will make him behave like an animal. Hermes has given the ancient Greek hero another herb called moly so that Odysseus is not seduced by Circe. Medical historian Sevasti Karahaliou says moly must have been an anti-aphrodisiac. (From an early 4th century BC Boeotian cup, Ashmolean Museum.) By Stavroula Kourakou (1)
In early December, the interdisciplinary Oino Istoro (or Talking Wine) group and Ktima Spyropoulos winery held the Symposium of Arcadian Wine Talk.
I presented a paper there, which I want to summarize here. The inspiration for this paper came from an extract from The Deipnosophists by Athenaeus, which refers to certain wines with unusual qualities: Theophrastus says that in Heraia, Arcadia, they produce a wine which when drunk stimulates men and makes women get pregnant. He also says that in Keryneia in Achaia, there grows a vine variety from which is made a type of wine that makes pregnant women miscarry; they even miscarry if they eat its grapes. The wine of Troezen makes those who drink it infertile. In Thassos they make a wine that is a soporific and another that causes insomnia.
Concoctions
Wonderful though wine is, with hypnotic and aphrodisiac properties known since antiquity, it could not have such effects on human health. These miraculous properties were the result of drinking concoctions, as Dioscurides calls the plethora of pharmaceutical wines whose methods of preparation he describes. He notes that the preparations acquire the strength of the plant that is mixed with them, and that such wines are not suitable for healthy people.
Both Dioscurides and Theophrastus describe the potency of various herbs, that is to say their pharmaceutical properties. For instance, some herbs cause relaxation and help those who have difficulty sleeping.
Tisanes and tablets made of such herbs are in use today in medicine and homeopathy. In antiquity one of the best known soporifics was mandrake.
In the Symposium of Xenophon, when the host suggests that everyone start drinking because they are thirsty, Socrates agrees, saying, The time has come to drink, my friends, because wine, watering our souls, puts our sorrows to sleep as mandrake puts humans to sleep; and it awakens cordiality just as oil livens up the flame.
Dioscurides gives a detailed description of how mandrake wine was prepared by the addition of the peel from the root of the plant, and he adds that in large doses it was fatal.
Apart from mandrake there were other herbs that promoted sleep, such as aristolochia or Dutchmans pipe, one of the well-known herbs of Arcadia. According to Theophrastus, robust honeyed wine, to which shavings of aristolochia root had been added, induced sleep. Hence it is no surprise that on Thassos they used to make a wine that fought insomnia. There were then, as there are today, herbs that promote sleep. By contrast, just as a cup of coffee can give some people insomnia when drunk at night, so there were herbs which were drunk in wine in those days to keep the Thassiotes awake.
A glance at Dioscurides reveals a surprising number of herbs said to induce abortions. And Plutarch confirms this: They gave pregnant women a herb that was capable of inducing an abortion.
The ancient Greek world, encouraged by philosophers such as Aristotle, who supported birth control as a means of dealing with poverty and the crimes that it gave rise to, used many drugs in order to induce abortions.
As for the paradoxical event in Keryneia where not only the wine but even the grapes were said to be abortifacients, Dioscurides explains that there is a wine that is harmful to embryos elleboros (hellebore) or sikyos agrios or skammonia are planted among the vines, and the grapes absorb their potency, affecting the wine that was made from them. Naturally enough, in such circumstances the grapes themselves acquired abortifacient properties.
There is however a significant difference. Those herbs were not deliberately planted among the vines; in many vineyards they grew wild. Besides, in many areas the grapes were sprinkled with salted shavings of the root of the herbs so that the bitter taste would protect the fruit from locusts and other parasites.
Anyone who happened to eat the unwashed fruit suffered the effects of the herb that had been used as a pest repellent. So there is nothing surprising about what went on in the vineyards of Keryneia.
While many herbs are referred to as abortifacients and others as possessing contraceptive properties, only two of the herbs described by Dioscurides are mentioned in relation to male sterility. Apiganos (Ruta graveolens) when its seed is drunk in wine, and cultivated cannabis when its fruit is eaten in large quantities were said to be spermicidal.
So there are very common herbs among Greek flora that explain the side effects of the wine preparation of Troezen in the Argolid, which was said to make those who drank it sterile. But we must not assume that the purpose was to tie a man down, as with the magical herbs of the Middle Ages and more recent times. Apiganos was drunk in wine as an antidote to poisons, while cannabis has many uses it is spun for fiber, contains oil and is edible. Unlike Indian cannabis, it contains the minutest quantities of the psychoactive substance tetrahydracannabinol. Both, however, were said to affect sexual performance, just as some contemporary drugs for hypertension create problems with erectile dysfunction.
The first phrase in the extract from Theophrastus concerning Arcadian wines is hard to interpret because the verb existimi has many meanings, one of which is make someone go mad. But the same verb also has the meaning of excite, stimulate and it is that sense which has been attributed to Athenaeuss translation in the French university collection.
The ancient sources refer to several herbs which, apart from their other therapeutic properties, were considered to be aphrodisiacs, depending on whether their seeds, buds and roots were drunk in sweet or dry wine, Dioscurides mentions a number of such herbs including akalifi (the common nettle) which, when made into a soup, is considered to this day to be an aphrodisiac dish.
The second meaning of the verb fits in with the rest of the phrase in question. Notwithstanding immaculate conception, the women of Arcadia could not have got pregnant by drinking wine, no matter what miraculous herb had been added to it. The only way would have been if they took advantage of the stimulating effect of the wine on their men.
Stimulant
In his work on the nature of women, Hippocrates advises what should be done if a woman wishes to become pregnant. He counsels a woman to drink wine and then sleep with her husband. However, neither of the two meanings of the verb existimi can be ruled out if one takes into account that the effect of certain herbs directly depends on the quantity that is taken. For example, take common coriander. When its seed is swallowed in small quantities in sweet wine, it promotes fertility, writes Dioscurides, while if it is taken in a large quantity it can cause dangerous confusion, so regular consumption of large amounts is to be avoided.
Thus coriander wine could have an aphrodisiac effect but in the case of abuse might lead to madness the dual meaning of the verb existimi.
I do not have the honor of being either a doctor or a botanist. I simply wanted to use exclusively ancient Greek sources to examine the properties of certain wines that raised questions among scholars. And so I came to Mantineia, the land of Pan, rich in pharmaceutical herbs.
(1) Stavroula Kourakou is a chemist and oenologist.
GGG Ping.
Censing The God: Psychoactive Substances In Ancient EgyptMichael ran through a series of slides, almost exclusively from Egypt's controversial Amarna period. This began with the pharaoh Akhenaten around 1378 BC and included the 12-year reign of the boy king Tutankhamun. Tiles, friezes and jewellery from this era frequently portrayed not just the psychoactive mandrake plant, but also the blue water lily. Drugs such as mandrake would have been burnt on incense holders and the fumes absorbed through the nasal passage... Michael showed slides of beautiful alabaster vases found in the tomb of Tutankhamun fashioned to resemble both the stem and flower of the blue water lily. These, Michael suggested, were used by the king to consume extracts of the plant. Friezes showed the pharaoh surrounded by the blue water lily and also the mandrake plant. This has led Michael to conclude that the image of the pharaoh as a militaristic leader, smiting his enemies, diverts us from the real fact that Egyptian kings considered the use of drugs, such as the blue water lily and the mandrake, important in communication with the gods... the consumption of drugs in Egyptian society extended far beyond the Amarna period and was important to the culture throughout its 3,000-year history. Furthermore, that it might well have had shamanistic roots which predated dynastic history, a theory I put forward in my book GODS OF EDEN He also touched upon the subject of nicotine and cocaine being found in Egyptian mummies during the 1990s by German toxicologist Svetlana Balabanova. Although he admits that the presence of cocaine, the active ingredient of the coca plant, cannot suitably be explained, there are a number of plants which were known to the Egyptians that contain tiny amounts of nicotine.
by Michael Carmichael
summarized by Andrew Collins
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We'll need more research to determine the effectiveness of these recipes. Any volunteers?
Eh no thanks.
There is a cactus plant that will send you on quite a trip but it also makes your nose run and run and run and run and run and run and run and... you get the idea.
You might as well just catch a cold and take some OTC cough syrup. You get a nice floaty feeling and the added benefit of immunity to that particular virus.
Aw, shucks. :)
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