The science of medicine, like other sciences, was carried to a very high
degree of perfection by the ancient Hindus. Their great power of
observation, generalization and analysis, combined with patient labor in
a country of boundless resources, whose fertility for herbs and plants
is most remarkable, place them in an exceptionally favorable position to
prosecute their study of this great science.
Lord Ampthill, British Governor, (February 1905) said at Madras: "Now we
are beginning to find out that the Hindu Sashtras also contain a
Sanitary Code no less correct in principle, and that the great
law-giver, Manu, was one of the greatest sanitary reformers the world
has ever seen!"
Sir William Jones (1746-1794) came to India as a judge of the Supreme
Court at Calcutta. He said with prophetic warning " Infinite advantage
may be derived by Europeans from the various medical books in Sanskrit,
which contain the names and descriptions of Indian plants and minerals,
with their uses, discovered by experience, in curing disorders."
(source: Eminent Orientalists: Indian European American - Asian
Educational Services. p.21).
Horace Hyman Wilson (1786-1860) says: "The Ancients attained a
thoroughly a proficiency in medicine and surgery as any people whose
acquaintance are recorded. This might be expected, because their patient
attention and natural shrewdness would render them excellent observers,
whilst the extent and fertility of their native country would furnish
them with many valuable drugs and medicaments. Their diagnosis is said,
in consequence, to define and distinguish symptoms with accuracy, and
their Materia Medica is most voluminous."
(source: Wilson's Works, Volume III, p. 269.)
Albrecht Weber (1825-1901) writes: "The number of medicinal works and
authors is extraordinarily large."
(source: Indian Literature - Albrecht Weber p. 269).
Medicine appears to have been the oldest Indian science, its roots going
back to Yoga practices, which stress a holistic approach to health,
based primarily on proper diet and exercise. Ancient Indian texts on
physiology, identified three body "humours" wind, gall, and mucus - with
which are associated the sattva, (true or good), rajas (strong), and
tamas, (dark or evil) "strands" of behavior, as primary causal factors
in determining good or ill health. Ayurveda focused on longevity, honey
and garlic were often prescribed. A wide variety of herbs were listed in
ancient India's pharmacopoeia. Some of these medicinal herbs or plant
oil have been indeed proved to be cures for specific diseases. Oil from
the bark of chaulmugra trees remains the most effective treatment for
leprosy. India's oldest medical texts were far superior to most
subsequent works in the field.
Anatomy and physiology, like some aspects of chemistry, were by-products
of medicine. As far back as the sixth century B.C. Indian physicians
described ligaments, sutures, lymphatics, nerve plexus, facia, adipoe
and vascular tissues, mucous and synovial membrances, and many more
muscles than any modern cadaver is able to show. They understood
remarkably well the process of digestion - the different functions of
the gastric juices, the conversion of chyme, into chyle, and of this
into blood.
Anticipating Weismann by 2400 years Atreya (ca 500 B.C.) held that the
parental seed is independent of the parent's body, and contains in
itself, in miniature, the whole parental organism. Examination for
virility was recomended as a prerequisite for marriage in men; and the
Code of Manu warned against marrying mates affected with tuberculosis,
epilepsy, leprosy, chronic dysepsia, piles, or loquacity. Birth control
in the latest theological fashion was suggested by the Indian medical
schools of 500 B.C. in the theory that during the twelve days of the
menstrual cycle impregnation is impossible. Foetal development was
described with considerable accuracy; it was noted that the sex of the
foetus remains for a time undetermined, and it was claimed that in some
cases the sex of the embryo could be influenced by food or drugs.
The records of Indian medicine begin with the Arthava-veda; here
embedded in incantation, is a list of diseases with their symptoms.
Appended to the Atharva-veda is the Ayur-Veda ("The Science of
Longevity"). In this oldest system of Indian medicine illness is
attributed to disorder in one of the four humors (air, water phlegm and
blood), and treatment is recommended with herbs. Many of its diagnoses
and cures are still used in India, with a success that is sometimes the
envy of Western physicians. The Rig-Veda names over a thousand such
herbs, and advocates water as the best cure for most diseases. Even in
Vedic times, physicians and surgeons lived in houses surrounded by
gardens in which they cultivated medicinal plants.
The great name in Indian medicine are those of Sushruta in the fifth
century B.C. and Charaka in the second century A.D. Sushrata professor
of medicine at the University of Benares, wrote down in Sanskrit a
system of diagnosis and therapy whose elements had descended to him from
his teacher Dhanwantari. His book dealt at length with surgery,
obstetrics, diet, bathing, drugs, infant feeding and hygiene, and
medical education. Charaka composed a Samhita (or encyclopedia) of
medicine, which is still used in India, and gave to his followers an
almost Hippocratic conception of their calling: "Not for self, not for
the fulfilment of any earthly desire of gain, but solely for the good of
suffering humanity should you treat your patients, and so excel all."
Only less illustrious than these are Vaghata (625 A.D.), who prepared a
medical compendium in prose and verse, and Bhava Misra (1550 A.D), whose
voluminous work on anatomy, physiology and medicine mentioned, a hundred
years before Harvey, the circulation of blood, and prescribed mercury
for that novel disease, syphilis, which had recently been brought in by
the Portuguese as part of Europe's heritage to India."
Medical Instruments of the Hindu Scriptures - Susruta (1000 B.C.E)
enumerates 125 sharp and blunt instruments
Surgical instruments - Courtesy: Institute of History and Medicine -
Hydrebad, India.
Refer to Indian Institute of Scientific Heritage
Sushruta described many surgical operations - cataract, hernia,
lithoromy, Caesarian section, etc - and 121 surgical instruments,
including lancets, sounds forceps, catheters, and rectal and vaginal
speculums. Despite Brahmanical prohibitions he advocated the dissection
of dead bodies as indispensable in the training of surgeons. He was the
first to graft upon a torn ear portions of skin taken from another part
of the body; and from him and his Indian successors rhinoplasty- the
surgical reconstruction of the nose-descended into modern medicine. "The
ancient Hindus," says F. H. Garrison, "performed almost every major
operation except ligation of the arteries." Limbs were amputated,
abdominal sections were performed, fractures were set, hemorrhoids and
fistulas were removed.
(source: History of Medicine - By F. H. Garrison Philadelphia., 1929 and
The Story of civilizations: Our Oriental Heritage - By Will Durant ISBN:
1567310125 1937 p.531).
Mrs. Charlotte Manning says: "The surgical instruments of the Hindus
were sufficiently sharp, indeed, as to be capable of dividing a hair
longitudinally." "Greek physicians have done much to preserve and
diffuse the medicinal science of India. We find, for instance, that the
Greek physician, Actuarius, celebrates the Hindu medicine, called
triphala. He mentions the peculiar products of India, of which it is
composed, by their Sanskrit name, Myrobalans."
(source: Ancient and Medieval India Volume II. p. 346).
Sushruta laid down elaborate rules for preparing an operation, and his
suggestion that the wound be sterilized by fumigation is one of the
earliest known efforts at antiseptic surgery. Both Sushruta and Charaka
mention the use of medicinal liquors to produce insensibility to pain.
In 927 A.D. two surgeons trepanned the skull of a king, and made him
insensitive to the operation by administering a drug called Samohini.
For the detection of the 1120 diseases he enumerated, Sushruta
recommended diagnosis by inspection, palpation, and ausculatation.
Taking of the pulse was described in a treatise dating 1300 A.D.
Urinalysis was a favorite method of diagnosis.
In the time of Yuan Chwang Indian medical treatment began with a
seven-day fast; in this interval the patient often recovered; if the
illness continued drugs were at last employed. Even then drugs were used
very sparingly; reliance was placed largely upon diet, baths,
inhalations, urethral, and vaginal injections. Indian physicians were
especially skilled in concocting antidotes for poison.
William Ward (1769-1823) notes:
"Inoculation for the small pox seems to have been known among the
Hindoos from time immemorial." The method of introducing the virus is
made by incision just above the wrist, in the right arm of the male, and
the left of the female. At the time of inoculation, and during the
progress of the disease, the parents daily employ a brahmin to worship
Sheetula, the goddess who presides over the disease."
(source: A View of the History, Literature, and Mythology of the Hindoos
- By William Ward volume I I p 339 London 1822).
Vaccination, unknown to Europe before the eighteenth century, was known
in India as early as 550 A.D. if we may judge from a text attributed to
Dhanwantari, one of the earliest Hindu physicians. "Take the fluid of
the pock on the udder of the cow...upon the point of a lancer, and lance
with it the arms between the shoulders and elbows until the blood
appears; then, mixing the fluid with the blood, the fever of the
small-pox will be produced."
Modern European physicians believe that caste separateness was
prescribed because of the Brahmin belief in invisible agents
transmitting disease; many of the laws of sanitation enjoined by
Sushruta and "Manu" seem to take for granted what we moderns, who love
new words for old things, call the germ theory of disease. Hypnotism as
therapy seems to have originated among Indians, who often took their
sick to the temples to be cured by hypnotic suggestion. The Englishmen
who introduced hypnotherapy into England-Braid Esdaile and Elliotson-
"undoubtedly got their ideas, and some of their experience, from contact
with India."
(source: The Story of civilizations: Our Oriental Heritage - By Will
Durant 1937 p.531)
Susruta calls surgery, "the first and best of medical sciences." He
insisted that those who intend to practice it must have actual
experimental knowledge of the subject. He says: "No accurate account of
any part of the body, including even its skin, can be rendered without a
knowledge of anatomy, hence anyone who wishes to acquire a thorough
knowledge of anatomy must prepare a dead body, and carefully examine all
its parts." For preliminary training, students were taught how to handle
their instruments by operating on pumpkins or cucumbers, and they were
made to practice on pieces of cloth or skin in order to learn how to sew
up wounds. Major operations, as described by Susruta, included
amputations, grafting, setting of fractures, removal of a foetus and
operation on the bladder for removal of gallstones. The operating room,
he declares should be disinfected with cleansing vapors. He describes
127 different instruments used for such purposes as cutting,
inoculations, puncturing, probing and sounding. Cutting instruments,
Susruta maintains, should be of "bright handsome polished metal, and
sharp enough to divide a hair lengthwise."
(source: The Pageant of India's History - By Gertrude Emerson Sen p. 66
- 68).
"The specific diseases whose names occur in Panini's grammar indicates
that medical studies had made great progress before his time (350 B.C.).
The chapter on the human body in the earliest Sanskrit dictionary, the
Amara-kosha presupposes a systematic cultivation of the science. The
works of the great traditional Indian physicians, Charaka, and Susruta,
were translated into Arabic not later than the 8th century. The chief
seat of the science was at Benares. The name of Charaka repeatedly
occurs in the Latin translations of Avicenna (Ibn Sina), Rhazes (Al Rasi),
and Serapion (Ibn Serabi).
Charaka
(image source: Vishwa Hindu Parishad of America. Inc - 2002 calendar).
Indian medicine dealt with the whole area of the science. It described
the structure of the body, its organs, ligaments, muscles, vessels, and
tissues. The materia medica of the Hindus embraces a vast collection of
drugs belonging to the mineral, vegetable, and animal kingdom, many of
which have been adopted by the European physicians. Their pharmacy
contained ingenious processes of preparation, with elaborate directions
for the administration and classification of medicines. Much attention
was devoted to hygiene, to the regimen of the body, and to diet.
The surgery of the ancient Indian physicians appears to have been bold
and skilful. They conducted amputations, arresting the bleeding by
pressure, a cup-shaped bandage, and boiling oil. They practiced
lithotomy; performed operations in the abdomen and uterus; cured hernia,
fistula, piles; set broken bones and dislocations; and were dexterous in
the extraction of foreign substances from the body. A special branch of
surgery was devoted to rhinoplasty, or operations for improving deformed
ears and noses, and forming new ones. They devoted great care to the
making of surgical instruments, and to the training of students by means
of operations performed on wax spread out on a board, or on the tissues
and cells of the vegetable kingdom, and upon dead animals. Considerable
advances were also made in veterinary science, and mongraphs exist on
the diseases of horses and elephants. "
(source: The Indian Empire - By Sir William Wilson Hunter p.148-150).
Ancient India possessed advanced medical knowledge. Her doctors knew
about metabolism, the circulatory system, genetics, and the nervous
system as well as the transmission of specific characteristics by
heredity. Vedic physicians understood medical ways to counteract the
effects of poison gas, performed Caesarean sections and brain
operations, and used anesthetics.
Sushruta (5th century BC) listed the diagnosis of 1,120 diseases. He
described 121 surgical instruments and was the first to experiment in
plastic surgery.
(source: We Are Not The First – By Andrew Tomas - A Bantam Book 1971 New
York p. 15 - 49).
The most remarkable part of Charaka's work is his classification of
remedies drawn from vegetable, mineral and animal sources. Over two
thousand vegetable preparations, derived from the roots, bark, flowers,
fruits, seeds or sap of plants and trees, are described vy Charaka, who
also gives the correct time of year for gathering these materials and
the method of preparing and administering them. Charaka sounds
surprisingly modern. He devotes a good deal of attention to children's
diseases, and discusses proper feeding and hours of sleep. He stresses
the care of the teeth and the necessity of cleaning them. The universal
custom among Hindus of using a medicinal stick to clean the teeth and of
rinsing the mouth thoroughly after every meal is so firmly established
that it must go back to very ancient times. Diagnosis in Charaka's time
was primarily based on careful study of the pulse, and that Charaka had
a good idea of blood circulation is apparent from this passage in his
treatise: "From that great center (the heart) emanate the vessels
carrying blood into all part of the body - the element which nourishes
the life of all animals and without which it would be extinct."
Charaka's treatise was based on the teaching of Atreya, whose date has
been assigned to the sixth century B.C. Previous to Atreya, Ayurveda,
"the science of life" was one of the recognized Vedic studies. High
ethical standards which should be maintained by medical profession were
also stressed by Charaka. He says: "Not for money nor for any earthly
objects should one treat his patients. In this the physician's work
excels all vocations. Those who sell treatment as a merchandise neglect
the true measure of gold in search of mere dust."
(source: The Pageant of India's History - By Gertrude Emerson Sen p. 66
- 67).
Horace Hayman Wilson (1786-1860) Eminent Orientalist, observed:
"That in medicine, or the astronomy and metaphysics, the Hindus have
kept pace with the most enlightened nations of the world: and that they
attained as thorough a proficiency in medicine and surgery as any people
whose acquisitions are recorded." He says further: "It would easily be
supposed that their patient attention and national shrewdness would
render the Hindus excellent observers."
(source: Eminent Orientalists: Indian European American - Asian
Educational Services. p. 77).
The great picture of Indian medicine is one of rapid development in the
Vedic and Buddhist period, followed by centuries of slow and cautious
improvement. In the time of Alexander, says Garrison, "Hindu physicians
and surgeons enjoyed a well-deserved reputation for superior knowledge
and skill," and even Aristotle is believed by some students to have been
indebted to them. So too with the Persians and Arabs.
We find Persians and Arabs translating into their languages, in the
eighth century A.D., the thousand-year-old compendia of Sushrata and
Charaka. The great Caliph Haroun-al-Rashid accepted the preeminence of
Indian medicine and scholarship, and imported Indian physicians to
organize hospitals and medical schools in Baghdad.
Lord Amphill concludes that medieval and modern Europe owes its system
of medicine directly to the Arabs, and through them to India.
(source: The Story of civilizations: Our Oriental Heritage - By Will
Durant ISBN: 1567310125 1937 p.531).
Dorothea Chaplin mentions in her book, Matter, myth and Spirit or Keltic
and Hindu Links (pp 168-9), "Long before the year 460 B.C., in which
Hippocrates, the father of European medicine was born, the Hindus had
built an extensive pharmacopoeia and had elaborate treatises on a
variety of medical and surgical subjects....The Hindus' wonderful
knowledge on a variety of medicine has for some considerable time led
them away from surgical methods as working destruction on the nervous
system, which their scientific medical system is able to obliviate,
producing a cure even without preliminary crisis."
(source: Proof of Vedic Culture's Global Existence - By Stephen Knapp.
World Relief Network ISBN: 0961741066 p 31).
The practice of medicine, like all other sciences, was regulated by a
code of social ethics. A physician (vaidya) was to be devoted to the
service of the sick. Charaka's advice to his students contained the gist
of the professional ethics:
"If you want success in your practice, wealth and fame, and heaven after
your death, you must pray every day on rising and going to bed for the
welfare of all beings and you must strive with all your soul for the
health of the sick. You must not betray your patients, even at the cost
of your own life. You must not get drunk, or commit evil, or have evil
companions. You must be pleasant, of speech and thoughtful, always
striving to improve your knowledge."
Free hospitals were maintained by the kings and merchants. Nursing and
attending the sick was considered to be one of the highest service to
dharma.
(source: Ancient Indian History and Culture - By Chidambara Kulkarni p.
273).
Ancient Hospitals
The Hindus were the first nation to establish hospitals, and for
centuries they were the only people in the world who maintained them.
The Chinese traveler, Fa-hien, speaking of a hospital he visited in
Pataliputra says: "Hither come all poor and helpless patients suffering
from all kinds of infirmities. They are well taken care of, and a doctor
attends them; food and medicine being supplied according to their wants.
Thus they are made quite comfortable, and when they are well, they may
go away."
"The earliest hospital in Europe," says historian Vincent A. Smith, "is
said to have been opened in the tenth century."
(source: Early History of India - By Vincent Smith p. 259).
Smallpox inoculation started in India before the West
Smallpox inoculation is an ancient Indian tradition and was practiced in
India before the West.
In ancient times in India smallpox was prevented through the tikah
(inoculation). Kurt Pollak (1968) writes, "preventive inoculation
against the smallpox, which was practiced in China from the 11th
century, apparently came from India". This inoculation process was
generally practiced in large part of Northern and Southern India, but
around 1803-04 the British government banned this process. It's banning,
undoubtedly, was done in the name of 'humanity', and justified by the
Superintendent General of Vaccine (manufactured by Dr. E. Jenner from
the cow for use in the inoculation against smallpox).
Dharmapal has quoted British sources to prove that inoculation in India
was practiced before the British did. In the seventeenth century,
smallpox inoculation (tikah) was practiced in India. A particular sect
of Brahmins employed a sharp iron needle to carry out these practices.
In 1731, Coult was in Bengal and he observed it and wrote (Operation of
inoculation of the smallpox as performed in Bengall from Re. Coult to
Dr. Oliver Coult in 'An account of the diseases of Bengall' Calcutta,
dated February 10, 1731):
"The operation of inoculation called by the natives tikah has been known
in the kingdom of Bengall as near as I can learn, about 150 years and
according to the Bhamanian records was first performed by one Dununtary,
a physician of Champanagar, a small town by the side of the Ganges about
half way to Cossimbazar whose memory in now holden in great esteem as
being through the another of this operation, which secret, say they, he
had immediately of God in a dream.'
English physician Jenner is credited with discovering vaccination on a
scientific basis with his studies on small pox in 1796. A group of
Fellows of the Royal Society had earlier studied the method of
inoculating people in India and submitted its report in the 1760s. Dr J.
Z. Holwell, one of the members who was in the Bengal Province for more
than ten years to study the Indian vaccination method, lectured at the
London Royal College of Physicians in 1767 "that nearly the same
salutary method, now so happily pursued in England,... has the sanction
of remotest antiquity (in India), illustrating the propriety of present
practice".
Dr. J. Z. Holwell writes the most detailed account for the college of
Physicians in London in 1767 (An account of the manner of inoculating
for the smallpox in the East Indies, by J. Z. Holwell, F.R.S. addressed
to the President and Members of the College of Physicians in London). He
wrote:
"Inoculation is performed in Indostan by a particular tribe of Bramins,
who are delegated annually for this service from the different Colleges
of Bindoobund, Eleabas, Benares, & c. over all the distant provinces:
dividing themselves into small parties, of three or four each, they plan
their traveling circuits in such wise as to arrive at the places of the
operation consists only in abstaining for a month from fish, milk, and
ghee (a kind of butter made generally of buffalo's milk). When the
Bramins begin to inoculate, they pass from house to house and operate at
the door, refusing to inoculate any who have not, on a strict scrutiny,
duly observed the preparatory course enjoined them. It is no uncommon
thing for them to ask the parents how many pocks they choose their
children should have."
(source: An account of the manner of inoculating for the smallpox in the
East Indies - by J. Z. Holwell M.D., F.R.S.).
On the efficacy of this practice Holwell has the following to say:
"When the before recited treatment of the inoculated is strictly
followed, it is next to a miracle to hear, that one in a million fails
of receiving the infection, or of one that miscarries under it.. Since,
therefore, this practice of the East has been followed without
variation, and with uniform success from the remotest unknown times, it
is but justice to conclude, it must have been originally founded on the
basis of rational principle and experiment."
Holwell's detailed account, not only describes inoculation, but also
shows that the Indians knew that microbes caused such diseases.
(source: Indian Science And Technology in the Eighteenth Century; some
contemporary European accounts - By Dharampal 1971. An Account of the
manner of inoculating for the Smallpox in the East Indies. Mapusa, Goa:
Other India Press. Chapter VIII p. 142 -164. The Healers, the Doctor,
then and now - By Pollack, Kurt 1968.English Edition. p. 37-8.).
Also refer to Indian Institute of Science - Prevention of Small Pox in
ancient India).
The Sactya Grantham - ancient Brahman medical text ~ 3,500 years old
describing brain surgery and anaesthetics, contains the following
passages giving instructions on small pox vaccination:
“Take on the tip of a knife the contents of the inflammation, inject it
into the arm of the man, mixing it with his blood. A fever will follow
but the malady will pass very easily and will create no complications.”
Edward Jenner (1749-1823) is credited with the discovery of vaccination
but it appears that ancient India has prior claim!"
(source: We Are Not The First – By Andrew Tomas - A Bantam Book 1971 New
York p. 15 - 49). and http://www.habtheory.com/1/habrefs.php).
The Brahmins had a theory of their operations. They believed the
atmosphere abounded with imperceptible animalculae (refined to bacteria
within a larger context today). They distinguished tow types of these:
those that are harmful and those not so. The Brahmins therefore believed
that their treatment in inoculating the person expelled the immediate
cause of the disease. How effective was the inoculation? According to
Dr. J. Z. Holwell, FRS, who had addressed the College of Physicians in
London:
“When the before recited treatment of the inoculation is strictly
followed, it is next to a miracle to hear, that one in a million fails
to receiving the infection, or of one that miscarries under it.”
A later estimate by the Superintendent General of Vaccine in 1804 noted
that fatalities among the inoculated counted one in 200 among the Indian
population and one in 60 to 70 among the Europeans. There is an
explanation for this divergence. Most of the Europeans objected to the
inoculation on theological grounds.
Small pox has a long history in India; it is discussed in the Hindu
scriptures and even has a goddess (Sitala, literally “the cool one")
devoted exclusively to its cause. It seems therefore almost natural to
expect an Indian medical response to the disease. The inoculation
treatment against it was carried out by a particular caste of Brahmins
from the different medical colleges in the area. These Brahmins
circulated in the villages in groups of three or four to perform their
task.
The person to be inoculated was obliged to follow a certain dietary
regime; he had particularly to abstain from fish, milk, and ghee, which,
it was held, aggravated the fever that resulted after the treatment. The
method the Brahmins followed is similar to the one followed in our own
time in certain aspects. They punctured the space between the elbow and
the wrist with a sharp instrument and then proceeded to introduce into
the abrasion “various matter” prepared from inoculated pistules from the
preceding year. The purpose was to induce the disease itself, albeit in
a mild form; after it left the body, the person was rendered immune to
small-pox for life.
The Brahmins had a theory of their operations. They believed the
atmosphere abounded with imperceptible animalculae. They distinguished
two types of these: those harmful and those not so. The universality of
this practices ceased to obtain with the arrival of the British. Like
many specialists in India, including teachers, the Brahmin doctors had
been maintained through public revenues. With British rule, this fiscal
system was disrupted and the inoculators left to fend for themselves.
Two of the more important medical arts of India – plastic surgery and
inoculations against small pox. Both were indigenously evolved and the
accounts we have, come from Westerners sent out to study them. One of
these curious facts was the inoculation against small pox disease,
practiced in both north and south India till it was banned or disrupted
by the English authorities in 1802-3. The ban was pronounced on
“humanitarian” grounds by the Superintendent General of Vaccine.
(source: Homo Faber: Technology and Culture in India, China and the West
1500-1972 - By Claude Alvares p. 65-67 and Decolonizing History:
Technology and Culture in India, China and the West 1492 to the Present
Day - By Claude Alvares p.66-67).
European colonists from the sixteenth century onwards, gained knowledge
of plants, diseases and surgical techniques that were unknown in the
West. One such example is rauwolfia serpentia, a plant used in
traditional Indian medicine. The active ingredient is today used to
treat hypertension and anxiety in the West.
Sir Mountstuart Elphinstone has written: "Their use of these medicines
seems to have been very bold. They were the first nation who employed
minerals internally, and they not only gave mercury in that manner but
arsenic and arsenious acid, which were remedies in intermittents. They
have long used cinnabar for fumigations, by which they produced a speedy
and safe salivation. They have long practiced inoculation."
"They cut for the stone, couched for the cataract, and extracted the
fetus from the womb, and in their early works enumerate not less than
127 sorts of surgical instruments!" "Their acquaintance with medicines
seems to have been very extensive. We are not surprised at their
knowledge of simples, in which they gave early lessons to Europe, and
more recently taught us the benefit of smoking dhatura in asthma and the
use of cowitch against worms."
(source: History of India - Mountstuart Elphinstone London: John Murray
Date of Publication: 1849 p. 145).
The Englishman (a Calcutta Daily), in a lead story in 1880, said: "No
one can read the rules contained in great Sanskrit medical works without
coming the conclusion that in point of knowledge, the ancient Hindus
were in this respect very far in advance not only to the Greek and
Romans but also to Medieval Europe."
(source: Sanskrit Civilization - By G. R. Josyer p. 28).
Ayurveda or the Veda of Longevity
Ayurveda is a 3,000- to 5,000-year-old holistic healthcare system, which
looks at the individual, addresses diet, lifestyle and spirit, and
strives for balance in each person. It focuses on prevention, and sees,
many illnesses not as a collection of symptoms but as imbalances within
the body, mind or spirit that, once balance is restored, eats disease at
its root.
"The science of Medicine was cultivated early in India and modern
researches have disclosed the fact that the Materia Medica of the
Greeks, even of Hippocrates the "Father of Medicine," is based on the
older Materia Medica of the Hindus.... Charaka's work is divided into
eight books, describing various diseases and their treatment; and
Susruta's work has six parts, and specially treats of surgery and
operations which are considered difficult even in modern times. Various
chemical processes were known to the Hindus. Oxides, sulphates, and
suphurets of various metals were prepared, and metallic substances were
administered internally in India long before the Arabs borrowed the
practice from them, and introduced it in Europe in the Middle Ages."
(source: The Civilization of India - By Romesh C. Dutt p. 64).
A tree resin used in Indian medicine for 2,000 years as a folk remedy
for a variety of ailments works to lower cholesterol in lab animals, and
in a new way that might lead to the development of improved drugs for
people, U.S. researchers report. The tree is known in India as guggul,
or the myrrh shrub. It’s been used there since at least 600 BC to battle
obesity and arthritis, among other ailments.
(source: Ancient remedy could lead to alternative to today’s drugs -
msnbc.com).
"Indian medicine's influence on Portugal was fairly wide. You had echoes
of Indian or Ayurvedic practices that come into Portuguese usage.
Tamarind, for example, is a plant widely used in Ayurveda. It is applied
in Portuguese hospitals. It is used as a cooling agent, in combination
with other medicinal plants to help the absorption of those plants and
it is used in a poultice, placed on the skin.
(source: West has always benefited from Indian medicine).
"Hindu literature on anatomy and physiology as well as eugenics and
embryology has been voluminous. The Hindus knew the exact osteology of
the human body 2,000 years before Vesalius (c. 1545) and had some rough
ideas of the circulation of blood long before Harvey (1628). the
internal administration of mercury, iron and other powerful metallic
drugs were practized by the Hindu physicians at least 1,000 years before
Paracelsus (1540). And they have written extensive treatises on these
subjects."
(source: Creative India - By Benoy Kumar Sarkar published Motilal
Banarsi Dass, Lahore 1937. p. 5).
Ayurveda is a traditional healing system of India, with origins firmly
rooted in the culture of the Indian subcontinent. Some 5000 years ago,
the great rishis, or seers of ancient India, observed the fundamentals
of life and organized them into a system. Ayurveda was their gift to us,
an oral tradition passed down from generation to generation. Ayurvedic
teachings were recorded as sutras, succinct poetical verses in Sanskrit,
containing the essence of a topic and acting as aides-memoire for the
students. Sanskrit, the ancient language of India, reflects the
philosophy behind Ayurveda and the depth within it. Sanskrit has a
wealth of words for aspects within and beyond consciousness.
A few treatises on Ayurveda date from around 1000 B.C. The best known is
Charaka Samhita, which concentrates on internal medicine. Many of
today’s Ayurvedic physicians use Astanga Hrdayam, a more concise
compilation written over 1000 years ago from the earlier texts.
(source: The Book of Ayurveda: A Holistic Approach to Health and
Longevity - By Judith H. Morrison p. 15 -20).
US medical schools to teach Ayurveda
American medical schools will teach students the goodness of Ayurveda
with visiting Indian specialists offering a 12-hour crash course
programme on the medical system based on herbs.
Schools in the United States are offering the course taught by Dr Palep
under the aegis of Complementary Alternative Medicine and include topics
like Ayurveda philosophy, anatomy, physiology, pathology, pharmacology,
clinical exam and treatments. It also teaches Yoga, meditation and
panchkarma therapy (process of detoxification and rejuvenation).
(source: US medical schools to teach Ayurveda - sify.com).
Veterinary science in Ancient India
Since animals were regarded as a part of the same cosmos as humans, it
is not surprising that animal life was keenly protected and veterinary
medicine was a distinct branch of science with its own hospitals and
scholars. Numerous texts, especially of the postclassical period,
Visnudharmottara Mahapurana for example, mention veterinary medicine.
Megasthenes refers to the kind of treatment which was later to be
incorporated in Palakapyamuni's Hastya yur Veda and similar treatises.
Salihotra was the most eminent authority on horse breeding and
hippiatry. Juadudatta gives a detailed account of the medical treatment
of cows in his Asva-Vaidyaka.
(source: India and World Civilization - By D. P. Singhal Pan Macmillan
Limited. 1993. p.187-188).
According to Stanley Wolpert, " Veterinary science had developed into an
Indian medical specialty by that early era, and India's monarchs seem to
have supported special hospitals for their horses as well as their
elephants. Hindu faith in the sacrosanctity of animals as well as human
souls, and belief in the partial divinity of cows and elephants helps
explain perhaps what seems to be far better care lavished on such
animals... A uniquely specialized branch of Indian medicine was called
Hastyaurveda ("The Science of Prolonging Elephant Life").
(source: An Introduction to India - By Stanley Wolpert p. 193-194).
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