Garrett Ryan (Toldinstone); Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
The "Bimaran casket or reliquary" of Eastern Afghanistan (Scythia/Gandhara) |
Drug use in Ancient Greece and Rome
This soapstone vessel contained the Buddha depicted in gold: |
See the same burial mound gold discoveries known as the Bimaran casketBuddhist White Tara with blue lotus - Who were the Kurgans, their religion (pre-Buddhist wanderer-nomads who settled along the Silk Road), culture, and burial mounds (Buddhist stupas or ancient tumuli/kurgans)
- What does Indian historian Dr. Ranajit Pal have to say?
The Scythians/Shakyians/Sakas were famous for a drug combination known (to Indo-Aryans) as soma (Ariyan/Iranian haoma), the ingredients of which are unsure but such entheogens as blue lotus (Sanskrit utpala), hashish, and fermented mare's milk or psychedelic mushrooms seem to be key to this amrita (nectar of immortality or the deathless, Pali amata).
Sacred magic mushroom for amata? |
If this video was good, one might also enjoy Toldinstone/Garrett Ryan's book Naked Statues, Fat Gladiators, and War Elephants: Frequently Asked Questions about the Ancient Greeks and Romans.
For those so inclined to find Ryan on the Web:
- Reddit.com/Ask Historians/Toldinstone
- Instagram.com/toldinstone
- Goodreads/Author Garrett Ryan
- Patreon: patreon.com/toldinstone
Chapters:
- 0:00 Introduction
- 1:01 Of Scythians and cannabis
- 1:49 Medical uses of opium
- 3:18 Medical uses of cannabis
- 4:15 The poppy goddess
- 4:41 Drugs in Greek religious ritual
- 5:23 The Eleusinian Mysteries
- 6:01 Recreational drugs in Ancient Rome
- 6:53 Problems of evidence
- 7:21 Conclusion
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