Smvs 224

The Cannabis

  • Period: 6000 BCE to 6000 BCE

    6000 A.C

    Cannabis seeds are use for food in China
  • Period: 4000 BCE to 4000 BCE

    4000 A.C

    Hemp textiles are used in China (Pharmacotheon)
  • Period: 2727 BCE to 2727 BCE

    2727 A.C

    The first used of cannabis registered in te Chinese pharmacopedia. In all parts of world humanity has used cannabis for a variety of health problems
  • Period: 1500 BCE to 1500 BCE

    1500 A.C

    Cannabis is grown in China for food and fiber
  • Period: 1200 BCE to 800 BCE

    1200-800 A.C

    Cannabis is mentioded in the Hindu sacred text Atarvaveda (science of charms) as "sacred herb"
  • Period: 700 BCE to 600 BCE

    700-600 A.C

    The Zend Avesta Zoroastrian, an acient persian religious text of several hundred volumes, and which is said to have been written by Zoroaster, refers to marijuana as Zoroaster's " Good narcotic"
  • Period: 700 BCE to 300 BCE

    700-300 A.C

    The scythian tribes leave cannabis seeds as offerings in the royal tombs
  • Period: 500 BCE to 500 BCE

    500 A.C

    An Escite couple dies and is buried with two small tents covering censers
  • Period: 500 BCE to 100 BCE

    500-100

    Hemp spreads throughout northem Europe
  • Period: 500 BCE to 600 BCE

    500-600 B.C

    The jewish talmud mentions the euphoric properties of cannabis
  • Period: 430 BCE to 430 BCE

    430 A.C

    Herodotus reports on both the ritual and recreational use of cannabis by the Scythians
  • Period: 170 BCE to 170 BCE

    170 B.C

    Gallen alludes to the Psychoactivity of the confection of the cannabis seed
  • Period: 100 BCE to 100 BCE

    100 A.C

    The psuchotropic properties of cannabis are mentioned in the new herrbal compilation of pen T' Sao Ching, which is attributed to an emperor
  • Period: 70 BCE to 70 BCE

    70 B.C

    Discorides mentions the use of cannabis as an roman medicine
  • Period: 1 BCE to 100 BCE

    1-100 D.C

    Construction of gold paste and samaritan glass from a reliquary to store hashish coriander of salt, buried in a grave in siberia