In the period before year one in the Gregorian calendar (known as ‘BC’) dating back nearly 5,000 years, we find the first references to cannabis in a medicinal sense.
Clearly cannabis is an ancient plant, which was known about and used across different continents up to 5,000 years ago. But there’s more, another 2,000 years to go, to bring us up to speed. With the advent of Christianity and the introduction of the Gregorian calendar, it is clear from numerous historical sources that cannabis was used, not only ritually in religious settings, but also as a primitive form of medicine for people in pain.
Fast forward circa 900 years and hemp started to be harvested industrially, initially by the British, and then by the Spanish. The hemp was cultivated for rope and paper , while the flowers from cannabis plants were used in religious ceremonies and as part of tinctures to cure little-understood illnesses.
As we enter the 1800s, cannabis cultivation is still growing strong, but the era of war is fast approaching. In the first two decades of the century, America declared war on Britain, and a few days later Napolean invaded Russia, aiming to put an end to Britain’s supply of the plant. Then…
Approaching the modern era, at the turn of the 20th Century, and we see that historically forces are in place to outlaw cannabis, as well as hemp cultivation. By the mid-1900s, cannabis was totally outlawed in the west, South Africa, and numerous other places, which had began to drug their populations with patented chemicals, ushering in a brand new era; that of ‘big pharma.’
By the middle of World War II, Cannabis had been dropped from the American Pharmacopoeia. Henry Ford’s plastic car made using Cannabis and fuelled from Cannabis was banned, but Henry Ford continued to illegally grow Cannabis for some years after the Federal ban. By the 1960s, cannabis was outlawed in most places in the world, but that didn’t stop millions of people from using it medicinally. And this is precisely when the tide towards medical cannabis use for patients began to gather momentum.
As we enter the 1990s, and cannabis legislation seems to have come full circle. Researchers in Italy, America, Israel and Canada are carrying out studies and surveys, showing how cannabis helps in the treatment of conditions like chronic pain, PTSD, Alzheimer’s and epilepsy. After years of prohibition, the Earth’s most ancient and precious medicine is finally being rediscovered.
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Take two of the most hot-button, tendentious issues of our time – cannabis use and gun rights – combine them, and now we really have a debate. As the law currently stands, medical cannabis patients are not afforded their 2nd amendment right to bear arms. Technically, all cannabis consumers are banned from buying guns, but only medical […]
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Cannabis policy changes in Africa are welcome. But small producers are the losers by Clemence Rusenga
Cannabis is a drug crop with a long history in Africa. Alongside coca and opium poppy, it has been subjected to international control for nearly a century. The International Opium Convention of 1925 institutionalised the international control system and extended the scope of control to cannabis. In 1961 a new international convention was adopted to […]
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University of Sydney to Offer Free Cannabis Testing by Johnny Green
The University of Sydney is launching a fairly robust study in an attempt to, as the university describes it, “investigate cannabis consumption, behaviours, and attitudes among users.” Part of the study involves offering free, anonymous cannabis testing for people that cultivate their own cannabis in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT). Cannabis was decriminalized in 2020 in the […]
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