In upupa o strige. A Study in Renaissance Psychotropic Plant Ointments

History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 16 (2):241 - 273 (1994)
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Abstract

Various historical sources from the Renaissance — including transcripts of trials for witchcraft, writings on demonology and textbooks of pharmaceutical botany — describe vegetal ointments prepared by women accused of witchcraft and endowed with marked psychoactive properties. Here, we examine the botanical composition and the possible pharmacological actions of these ointments. The results of our study suggest that recipes for narcotic and mind-altering salves were known to Renaissance folk healers, and were in part distinct from homologous preparations of educated medicine. In addition, our study reveals an unexpected connection of these vegetal psychotropes with archaic chtonic beliefs, confirming the tight association between rituals and cults centered on the Underworld and the image of the Medieval witch

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A study in Renaissance psychotropic plant ointments.Daniele Piomelli & Antonino Pollio - 1993 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 16 (2):241-273.
Renaissance Thought and its Sources.Michael Mooney (ed.) - 1979 - Cambridge University Press.

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