mylittleillumination:

Egyptian medical papyri documented a variety of diagnostics and medical achievements we still use today. Their medicine reached a very high standard, and its reputation spread to neighboring countries.

Especially, the complementary medicine like herbal medicine played the key role in society. Ancient Egyptian scrolls document natural herbs and holistic medicine that saved lives and cured disease.

Proof comes from burial sites, tombs and underground temples where archeologists have found extensive sets of medical documents and scrolls, including the Ebers Papyrus, the Edwin Smith Papyrus, the Hearst Papyrus, and the London Medical Papyrus, which contained the earliest documented awareness of tumors.

The most famous plant – medicine “encyclopedia” is the Ebers Papyrus, a 110 page scroll which rolls out to be about 20 meters long.

Egyptians consumed raw garlic and onions for endurance and to heal asthma and bronchial-pulmonary issues. Many of their herbs were steeped in wine and used as oral medicine.

These were natural herbs, untainted by pesticides, herbicides, insecticides, or fluoridated water.

The Egyptians documented use of myrrh, frankincense, fennel, cassia, thyme, juniper, and even aloe. Fresh garlic cloves were peeled, mashed and macerated in a mixture of vinegar and water and used as a rinse for sore throats and toothaches.

They knew about the healing powers of honey. In fact, the first official recognition of the importance of honey dates back to the first Egyptian Dynasty and the “Sealer of the Honey.”

In Niuserre’s Sun temple, bee-keepers are shown in hieroglyphics blowing smoke into hives as they are removing honey-combs.

The honey was immediately jarred and sealed and could therefore be kept for years, and it was used for the production of medicines and ointments. They even used it as a natural antibiotic.

The main land for bee-keeping was in Lower Egypt where there was extensive irrigation feeding thousands of flowering plants. The Bee was chosen as a symbol for the country and the gods were associated with the bee.

One pharaoh’s title was Bee King and his Royal archers protected the bees like they were his holy temple. The temples were actually homes for the bees, in order to satisfy the desire of the gods.

Canaan was called the “Land of Milk and Honey” in the Hebrew tradition.

Egyptian medicine is some of the oldest ever documented. From the 33rd century BC until the Persian invasion in 525 BC, Egyptian medical practice remained consistent in its highly advanced methods for the time.

Homer even wrote in the Odyssey: “In Egypt, the men are more skilled in medicine than any of human kind,” and “The Egyptians were skilled in medicine more than any other art.”

The Edwin Smith papyrus is still benefiting modern medicine, and is viewed as a learning manual. Treatments consisted of ailments made from animal, vegetable, fruits and minerals. But the Ebers Papyrus is the most voluminous record of ancient Egyptian medicine known. The scroll contains some 700 remedies including empirical practice and observation.

The papyrus actually contains a “treatise on the heart,” which recognizes the heart as the center of the blood supply, with vessels attached.

Even mental disorders, depression and dementia were detailed in one of the chapters. The Egyptians were treating intestinal disease and parasites, eye and skin problems, and even abscesses and tumors.

Remedies from the ancient Ebers Papyrus scrolls:

  • Aloe vera was used to alleviate burns, ulcers, skin diseases and allergies
  • Basil was written up as heart medicine
  • Balsam Apple (Apple of Jerusalem) was used as a laxative and as a liver stimulant
  • Bayberry was prescribed for diarrhea, ulcers and hemorrhoids
  • Caraway soothed digestion and was a breath freshener
  • Colchicum (citrullus colocynthus or meadow saffron) soothed rheumatism and reduced swelling
  • Dill was recognized for laxative and diuretic properties
  • Fenugreek was prescribed for respiratory disorders and to cleanse the stomach and calm the liver and pancreas
  • Frankincense was used for throat and larynx infections, and to stop bleeding and vomiting
  • Garlic was given to the Hebrew slaves daily to give them vitality and strength for building the pyramids
  • Licorice was utilized as a mild laxative, to expel phlegm, and to alleviate chest and respiratory problems
  • Onion was taken to prevent colds and to address cardiovascular problems (How did they know?)
  • Parsley was prescribed as a diuretic
  • Thyme was given as a pain reliever and Tumeric for open wounds
  • Poppy was used to relieve insomnia, as an anesthetic, and to deaden pain
  • Coriander was taken as a tea for urinary complaints, including cystitis
  • Pomegranate root was strained with water and drunk to address “snakes of the belly” (tapeworms).The alkaloids contained in pomegranate paralyzed the worms’ nervous system and they relinquished their hold.
  • Persian henna was used against hair loss

Disease was not uncommon in Ancient Egypt. There were many skin afflictions and parasites from the Nile river waters. Worms and tuberculosis were common, sometimes transmitted from cattle. Pneumonia struck people who breathed in too much sand into the lungs during sand storms.

But the Egyptian physicians took full advantage of the natural resources all around them in order to treat common ailments. Many of their methods are still very viable today and are considered part of the homeopathic world of medicine.

Thanks to diligent record keeping, scholars have been able to translate the scrolls and appreciate what the Egyptians knew back then about anatomy, hygiene, and healing. Those scrolls, without question, paved the way for modern medicine.

the-darkest-of-lights:

A Magical Inscription for Endurance

To stand like granite
Stout as a planet
Mark on a rock
With a stick of chalk:

Though chalk is frail
And cannot prevail
You shall be firm
As crystal or stone

Via Crones book of magical words
By Valerie worth

winebreadandart:

winebreadandart:

Berzerkers

During the golden Viking Age Berzerkers were fierce warriors who fought without restraint in battle. A Berzeker could be identified by the serkr, a shirt or coat, made from the pelt of a bear (ber). They fought in frenzied states of fury that were often worked up by acts against their honor or, as some historians believe, by certain foods. 

The Ulfhesnar are the lupine equalvient to the Berzerkers, who wore a wolf’s pelt instead of a bear’s in battle (as seen in the second image). 

Beowulf is thought to have been a Bezerker because of the bear pelt he wares during his battles in the epic. 

Skald’s, or poets such as Snorri Sturluson, describes Berzerkers as high warrior heroes in his Ynglinga Saga. circa 1225.

However throughout much of the early sagas, Berzerkers were portrayed as bullies who raided and often defamed many of their own countrymen. Heroes, like the warrior Egil in Egil’s Saga, won fame by defeating such tormentors.  While some noble warrior kings, as Hrolfr Kraki, used Berzerkers as personal warriors of their territories. 

In art and in the Sagas, Berzerkers are often identified by the biting down of one’s shield. The act of biting into the shield was a display of unreasonable fury and anger of raving madness. 

dionysian-light:

THE PROPOMPOI: SATYRS & FAUNS

It’s place ranging from February through into March, the Propompeia is a festival honoring all those companions and attendants of Dionysus in His revels and sacraments, those who lead Him from the waters to His sanctuary on Anthesteria in late February… the Maenads and Bacchantes, the Satyrs and Nymphs, the Muses, the Graces, the Kouretes, and more besides.  They are, as a group, called the Propompoi (though the Maenad priestesses who form the close retinue of Dionysus are known as his Thiasus).

Here we focus on the Satyrs and Fauns.  Though there is no great clarity on this in mythological sources, the basic difference seems to be that of goat and sheep — Satyrs are emphatically goatish, while Fauns derive their name from the shepherd-god Faunus.  Now technically, the later Latin term “Faun” was eventually used as a simple equivalent to the Greek term that became our word “Satyr”… however, the goat/sheep differentiation seems significant enough to keep in mind.

So, the narrow upward-pointing horns, the beards, the short erect tails, the hairy pelt, the independent and curious nature, the lean wiry figure that might give way to a hedonistic gut — these are all signs of a goat-footed Satyr.  And the wide curling horns, the woolly pelt, the long hanging tails, the divided lip, the herd/group mentality, the bulkier physique that can lead to an aggressive muscularity in males, these are all attributes of sheep-related Fauns.

In any case, Satyrs seem most commonly associated with Dionysos, as befits their exploratory, curious, and independent nature.  Though by all means, let’s welcome the occasional mellow and adventurous Faun as well!

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Sourcing (with help by starborn-vagabond:)

  1. “Nymphs And Satyrs” by Sydney Long
  2. http://victorially.tumblr.com/
  3. HasaBattle on deviantArt
  4. “Irresistable” by Norman Lindsay
  5. George Percy Jacomb-Hood
  6. Is by Katzeh on pixiv
  7. “Pan and Syrinx at the River” by Lullaby Child (Savannah Horrocks?)
  8. Swamp King by Candra
  9. Misc. Greek pottery
  10. Richard Westall