Unlike many civilizations, records of
Egyptian knowledge and use of poisons can only be dated back to approximately 300 BC. However, it is believed that the earliest known Egyptian
pharaoh,
Menes, studied the properties of poisonous plants and venoms, according to early records. The Egyptians are also thought to have come into knowledge about elements such as
antimony, copper,
crude arsenic, lead,
opium, and
mandrake (among others) which are mentioned in
papyri. They carefully documented venomous snakes and scorpions, their effects, and treatments, using controlled herbal poisons in medicine, and are also thought to have been the first to master distillation and extract poison from apricot kernels. The Kalpasthāna is a section of the
Suśrutasaṃhitā, an ancient Sanskrit medical compendium composed before c. 300 CE, with portions possibly dating to the fourth century BCE.It is devoted to the study of plant and animal poisons, including their classification, identification, and treatment. The
Kalpasthāna was influential on many later Sanskrit medical works and was translated into Arabic and other languages, influencing South East Asia, the Middle East, Tibet and eventually Europe.
Dioscorides, a Greek physician in the court of the Roman emperor
Nero, made an early attempt to classify plants according to their toxic and therapeutic effect. A work attributed to the 10th century author
Ibn Wahshiyya called the
Book on Poisons describes various toxic substances and poisonous recipes that can be made using
magic. In the 12th century, Jewish physician
Maimonides wrote
Kitāb al-Sumūm wa-l-Mutaḥarriz min al-Adwiya al-Qattāla ("Book on Poisons and the One Who Guards Against Deadly Drugs"), which discussed the treatment of poisoning. A 14th century
Kannada poetic work attributed to the Jain prince Mangarasa,
Khagendra Mani Darpana, describes several poisonous plants. of
Mathieu Orfila The late medieval philosopher
Pietro d'Abano compiled a treatise on venoms and poisons drawing on earlier Greek sources, particularly works attributed to Dioscorides such as On Venoms and On Poisons. This work reflects an early engagement with Greek scientific traditions and has been viewed as a precursor to the later revival of Greek science associated with the Renaissance. The 16th-century Swiss physician
Paracelsus is considered "the father" of modern toxicology, based on his rigorous approach to understanding the effects of substances on the body. He is credited with the classic toxicology maxim, "
Alle Dinge sind Gift und nichts ist ohne Gift; allein die Dosis macht, dass ein Ding kein Gift ist." which translates as, "All things are poisonous and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes a thing not poisonous." This is often condensed to: "
The dose makes the poison" or in Latin "Sola dosis facit venenum".
Mathieu Orfila is also considered the modern father of toxicology, having given the subject its first formal treatment in 1813 in his
Traité des poisons, also called
Toxicologie générale. In 1850,
Jean Stas became the first person to successfully isolate plant poisons from human tissue. This allowed him to identify the use of
nicotine as a poison in the Bocarmé murder case, providing the evidence needed to convict the Belgian Count
Hippolyte Visart de Bocarmé of killing his brother-in-law. In the modern era, regulatory oversight of toxicology has shifted to specialized governmental and international bodies, including the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the
World Health Organization (WHO), which enforce standardized protocols to assess chemical risks in food, drugs, and the environment. Building on Paracelsus's foundational dose-response principle, these agencies guide evidence-based safety evaluations through tiered toxicity studies and data interpretation. The FDA's
Redbook 2000 exemplifies this continued evolution, serving as a pivotal guidance document for toxicological principles in assessing food additives and ingredients, ensuring public health protections aligned with contemporary scientific rigor. ==Basic principles==