The
Mediterranean region contains the earliest archeological evidence of human use; the oldest known seeds date back to more than 5000BCE in the
Neolithic age with purposes such as food,
anaesthetics, and
ritual. Evidence from
ancient Greece indicates that opium was consumed in several ways, including inhalation of vapors,
suppositories,
medical poultices, and as a combination with
hemlock for suicide. Opium is mentioned in the most important
medical texts of the ancient and medieval world, including the
Ebers Papyrus and the writings of
Dioscorides,
Galen, and
Avicenna. Widespread medical use of unprocessed opium continued through the
American Civil War before giving way to
morphine and its successors, which could be injected at a precisely controlled dosage.
Ancient use (pre-500 CE) in India (probably
Papaver somniferum var.
album) Opium has been actively collected since approximately 3400BC. At least 17 finds of
Papaver somniferum from
Neolithic settlements have been reported throughout
Switzerland,
Germany, and
Spain, including the placement of large numbers of poppy seed capsules at a burial site (the
Cueva de los Murciélagos, or "Bat Cave", in Spain), which has been carbon-14 dated to 4200BCE. Numerous finds of
P. somniferum or
P. setigerum from
Bronze Age and
Iron Age settlements have also been reported. The first known cultivation of opium poppies was in
Mesopotamia, approximately 3400BCE, by
Sumerians, who called the plant
hul gil, the "joy plant". Tablets found at
Nippur, a Sumerian spiritual center south of
Baghdad, described the collection of poppy juice in the morning and its use in production of opium. Opium production continued under the
Babylonians and
Egyptians. Opium was used with
poison hemlock to put people quickly and painlessly to death. It was also used in medicine.
Spongia somnifera, sponges soaked in opium, were used during surgery. Opium was also mentioned after the
Persian conquest of Assyria and Babylonian lands in the . There is further evidence for the use of opium during this era due to painted
pyxis. These would be decorated with painted poppy capsules and birds holding both poppy capsules and poppy stalks. This is due to the fact that it is said that Demeter ate the opium plant when her daughter,
Persephone, was abducted so that she could fall asleep and forget her grief. For the citizens of
Mycenea, the opium poppy was an object of worship that was depicted on royal tombs. Additionally, certain ancient writers also believed poppy to be an important spice. Both
Cato and
Plauto wrote about its use as a spice, with archaeological evidence from seed cakes being found in ancient Roman farmhouses supporting these claims. The Greek gods
Hypnos (Sleep),
Nyx (Night), and
Thanatos (Death) were depicted wreathed in poppies or holding them. Poppies also frequently adorned statues of
Apollo,
Asclepius,
Pluto,
Demeter,
Aphrodite,
Kybele and
Isis, symbolizing nocturnal oblivion.
Dioscorides' five-volume
De Materia Medica, the precursor of
pharmacopoeias, remained in use (which was edited and improved in the Arabic versions) from the 1st to 16th centuries, and described opium and the wide range of its uses prevalent in the ancient world. depicts an opium den in
Turkestan, 1868. Between 400 and 1200 AD, Arab traders introduced opium to China, and to India by 700 AD. The renowned
Andalusian ophthalmologic surgeon
Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi ("Abulcasis", 936–1013 CE) relied on opium and
mandrake as surgical anesthetics and wrote a treatise,
al-Tasrif, that influenced medical thought well into the 16th century. The Persian physician
Abū 'Alī al-Husayn ibn Sina ("Avicenna") described opium as the most powerful of the stupefacients, in comparison to mandrake and other highly effective herbs, in
The Canon of Medicine. The text lists medicinal effects of opium, such as analgesia, hypnosis, antitussive effects, gastrointestinal effects, cognitive effects, respiratory depression, neuromuscular disturbances, and sexual dysfunction. It also refers to opium's potential as a poison. Avicenna describes several methods of delivery and recommendations for doses of the drug. This classic text was translated into Latin in 1175 and later into many other languages and remained authoritative until the 19th century.
Şerafeddin Sabuncuoğlu used opium in the 14th-century Ottoman Empire to treat
migraine headaches,
sciatica, and other painful ailments.
Reintroduction to Western medicine 's
Canon of Medicine, 1483 Manuscripts of
Pseudo-Apuleius's 5th-century work from the 10th and 11th centuries refer to the use of wild poppy
Papaver agreste or
Papaver rhoeas (identified as
P. silvaticum) instead of
P. somniferum for inducing sleep and relieving pain. The use of
Paracelsus'
laudanum was introduced to Western medicine in 1527, when Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim, better known by the name Paracelsus, claimed (dubiously) to have returned from wanderings in Arabia with a famous sword, within the pommel of which he kept "Stones of Immortality" compounded from opium thebaicum, citrus juice, and "quintessence of gold". The name "Paracelsus" was a pseudonym signifying him the equal or better of
Aulus Cornelius Celsus, whose text, which described the use of opium or a similar preparation, had recently been translated and reintroduced to medieval Europe.
The Canon of Medicine, the standard medical textbook that Paracelsus burned in a public bonfire three weeks after being appointed professor at the
University of Basel, also described the use of opium, though many Latin translations were of poor quality. the renowned "father of English medicine" or "English Hippocrates", to whom is attributed the quote, "Among the remedies which it has pleased Almighty God to give to man to relieve his sufferings, none is so universal and so efficacious as opium." Use of opium as a cure-all was reflected in the formulation of
mithridatium described in the 1728
Chambers Cyclopedia, which included true opium in the mixture. Eventually, laudanum became readily available and extensively used by the 18th century in Europe, especially England. Compared to other chemicals available to 18th century regular physicians, opium was a benign alternative to arsenic, mercury, or emetics, and it was remarkably successful in alleviating a wide range of ailments. Due to the constipation often produced by the consumption of opium, it was one of the most effective treatments for cholera, dysentery, and diarrhea. As a cough suppressant, opium was used to treat bronchitis, tuberculosis, and other respiratory illnesses. Opium was additionally prescribed for rheumatism and insomnia. Medical textbooks even recommended its use by people in good health, to "optimize the internal equilibrium of the human body". However, despite its medicinal values in these cases, it was noted that in cases of psychosis, it could cause anger or depression, and due to the drug's euphoric effects, it could cause depressed patients to become more depressed after the effects wore off because they would get used to being high. One reason for the increase in opiate consumption in the United States during the 19th century was the prescribing and dispensing of legal opiates by physicians and pharmacists to women with "female complaints" (mostly to relieve menstrual pain and
hysteria). Opium addiction in the later 19th century received a hereditary definition. Dr. George Beard in 1869 proposed his theory of
neurasthenia, a hereditary nervous system deficiency that could predispose an individual to addiction. Neurasthenia was increasingly tied in medical rhetoric to the "nervous exhaustion" suffered by many a white-collar worker in the increasingly hectic and industrialized U.S. life—the most likely potential clients of physicians.
Recreational use in Europe, the Middle East and the US (11th to 19th centuries) Soldiers returning home from the
Crusades in the 11th to 13th century brought opium with them. Opium is said to have been used for recreational purposes from the 14th century onwards in Muslim societies. Ottoman and European testimonies confirm that from the 16th to the 19th centuries Anatolian opium was eaten in Constantinople as much as it was exported to Europe. In 1573, for instance, a Venetian visitor to the Ottoman Empire observed many of the Turkish natives of Constantinople regularly drank a "certain black water made with opium" that makes them feel good, but to which they become so addicted, if they try to go without, they will "quickly die". From drinking it, dervishes claimed the drugs bestowed them with visionary glimpses of future happiness. Indeed, the Ottoman Empire supplied the West with opium long before China and India. Extensive textual and pictorial sources also show that poppy cultivation and opium consumption were widespread in
Safavid Iran and
Mughal India.
England In England, opium fulfilled a "critical" role, as it did other societies, in addressing multifactorial
pain,
cough,
dysentery,
diarrhea, as argued by
Virginia Berridge. A medical panacea of the 19th century, "any respectable person" could purchase a range of hashish pastes and (later) morphine with complementary injection kit. De Quincey writes about the great English Romantic poet
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834), whose "
Kubla Khan" is also widely considered to be a poem of the opium experience. Coleridge began using opium in 1791 after developing
jaundice and
rheumatic fever, and became a full addict after a severe attack of the disease in 1801, requiring 80–100 drops of
laudanum daily.
China Recreational use in China The earliest clear description of the use of opium as a
recreational drug in China came from Xu Boling, who wrote in 1483 that opium was "mainly used to aid masculinity, strengthen sperm and regain vigor", and that it "enhances the art of alchemists, sex and court ladies". He also described an expedition sent by the
Ming dynasty Chenghua Emperor in 1483 to procure opium for a price "equal to that of gold" in
Hainan,
Fujian,
Zhejiang,
Sichuan and
Shaanxi, where it is close to the western lands of
Xiyu. A century later,
Li Shizhen listed standard medical uses of opium in his renowned
Compendium of Materia Medica (1578), but also wrote that "lay people use it for the art of sex," in particular the ability to "arrest seminal emission". This association of opium with sex continued in China until the end of the 19th century. Opium smoking began as a privilege of the elite and remained a great luxury into the early 19th century. However, by 1861,
Wang Tao wrote that opium was used even by rich peasants, and even a small village without a rice store would have a shop where opium was sold. Recreational use of opium was part of a civilized and mannered ritual, akin to an
East Asian tea ceremony, prior to the extensive prohibitions that came later. Smoking of opium came on the heels of
tobacco smoking and may have been encouraged by a brief
ban on the smoking of tobacco by the Ming emperor. The prohibition ended in 1644 with the coming of the
Qing dynasty, which encouraged smokers to mix in increasing amounts of opium. The
Indian Diaspora distributed opium-eaters in the same way, and both social groups survived as "
lascars" (seamen) and "
coolies" (manual laborers). French sailors provided another major group of opium smokers, having gotten the habit while in
French Indochina, where the drug was promoted and monopolized by the colonial government as a source of revenue. Among white Europeans, opium was more frequently consumed as
laudanum or in
patent medicines. Britain's All-India Opium Act of 1878 formalized ethnic restrictions on the use of opium, limiting recreational opium sales to registered Indian opium-eaters and Chinese opium-smokers only and prohibiting its sale to workers from Burma. Likewise, in San Francisco, Chinese immigrants were permitted to smoke opium, so long as they refrained from doing so in the presence of whites.
Prohibition and conflict in China , June 1839 A large scale opium prohibition attempt began in 1729, when the
Qing Yongzheng Emperor, disturbed by
madak smoking at court and carrying out the government's role of upholding
Confucian virtues, officially prohibited the sale of opium, except for a small amount for medicinal purposes. The ban punished sellers and
opium den keepers, but not users of the drug. During the Qing dynasty, China opened itself to foreign trade under the
Canton System through the port of
Guangzhou (Canton), with traders from the
East India Company visiting the port by the 1690s. Due to the growing British demand for Chinese tea and the Chinese Emperor's lack of interest in British commodities other than silver, British traders resorted to trade in opium as a high-value commodity for which China was not self-sufficient. The English traders had been purchasing small amounts of opium from India for trade since
Ralph Fitch first visited in the mid-16th century. There was an extensive and complicated system of BEIC agencies involved in the supervision and management of opium production and distribution in India. Bengal opium was highly prized, commanding twice the price of the domestic Chinese product, which was regarded as inferior in quality. during the
First Opium War, May 1841 Some competition came from the newly independent United States, which began to compete in Guangzhou, selling Turkish opium in the 1820s. Portuguese traders also brought opium from the independent Malwa states of western India, although by 1820, the British were able to restrict this trade by charging "pass duty" on the opium when it was forced to pass through Bombay to reach an
entrepot. This illegal sale of opium, which has been called "the most long continued and systematic international crime of modern times", became one of the world's most valuable single commodity trades, and between 1814 and 1850, sucked out 11 percent of China's money supply. In response to the ever-growing number of Chinese people becoming addicted to opium, the Qing
Daoguang Emperor took strong action to halt the smuggling of opium, including the seizure of cargo. In 1838, the Chinese Commissioner
Lin Zexu destroyed 20,000 chests of opium (approximately 2,660,000 pounds) in Guangzhou in a river. and the 1842
Treaty of Nanking (signed by
Henry Pottinger,
Keying, and
Yilibu). The opium trade incurred intense enmity from the later British Prime Minister
William Ewart Gladstone. As a member of Parliament, Gladstone called it "most infamous and atrocious" referring to the opium trade between China and British India in particular. Gladstone was fiercely against both of the
Opium Wars Britain waged in China in the
First Opium War initiated in 1840 and the
Second Opium War initiated in 1857, denounced British violence against Chinese, and was ardently opposed to the British trade in opium to China. Gladstone lambasted it as "
Palmerston's Opium War" and said that he felt "in dread of the judgments of God upon England for our national iniquity towards China" in May 1840. A famous speech was made by Gladstone in Parliament against the
First Opium War. Gladstone criticized it as "a war more unjust in its origin, a war more calculated in its progress to cover this country with permanent disgrace". His hostility to opium stemmed from the effects of opium brought upon his sister Helen. Due to the First Opium war brought on by
Palmerston, there was initial reluctance to join the government of Peel on part of Gladstone before 1841. warehouse, Following China's defeat in the
Second Opium War in 1858, China was forced to legalize opium and began massive domestic production. Importation of opium peaked in 1879 at 6,700 tons, and by 1906, China was producing 85 percent of the world's opium, some 35,000 tons, and 27 percent of its adult male population regularly used opium13.5million people consuming 39,000 tons of opium yearly. These missionaries were generally outraged over the British government's
Royal Commission on Opium visiting India but not China. Accordingly, the missionaries first organized the
Anti-Opium League in China among their colleagues in every mission station in China. American missionary
Hampden Coit DuBose acted as first president. This organization, which had elected national officers and held an annual national meeting, was instrumental in gathering data from every Western-trained medical doctor in China, which was then published as
William Hector Park compiled
Opinions of Over 100 Physicians on the Use of Opium in China (Shanghai: American Presbyterian Mission Press, 1899). The vast majority of these medical doctors were missionaries; the survey also included doctors who were in private practices, particularly in Shanghai and
Hong Kong, as well as Chinese who had been trained in medical schools in Western countries. In England, the home director of the
China Inland Mission,
Benjamin Broomhall, was an active opponent of the opium trade, writing two books to promote the banning of opium smoking:
The Truth about Opium Smoking and
The Chinese Opium Smoker. In 1888, Broomhall formed and became secretary of the Christian Union for the Severance of the British Empire with the Opium Traffic and editor of its periodical,
National Righteousness. He lobbied the
British Parliament to stop the opium trade. He and
James Laidlaw Maxwell appealed to the London Missionary Conference of 1888 and the Edinburgh Missionary Conference of 1910 to condemn the continuation of the trade. When Broomhall was dying, his son Marshall read to him from
The Times the welcome news that an agreement had been signed ensuring the end of the opium trade within two years. . Official Chinese resistance to opium was renewed on September 20, 1906, with an antiopium initiative intended to eliminate the drug problem within 10 years. The program relied on the turning of public sentiment against opium, with mass meetings at which
opium paraphernalia were publicly burned, as well as coercive legal action and the granting of police powers to organizations such as the Fujian Anti-Opium Society. Smokers were required to register for licenses for gradually reducing rations of the drug. Action against opium farmers centered upon a highly repressive incarnation of law enforcement in which rural populations had their property destroyed, their land confiscated and/or were publicly tortured, humiliated and executed. Addicts sometimes turned to missionaries for treatment for their addiction, though many associated these foreigners with the drug trade. The program was counted as a substantial success, with a cessation of direct British opium exports to China (but not Hong Kong) and most provinces declared free of opium production. Nonetheless, the success of the program was only temporary, with opium use rapidly increasing during the disorder following the death of
Yuan Shikai in 1916. Opium farming also increased, peaking in 1930 when the
League of Nations singled China out as the primary source of illicit opium in East and Southeast Asia. Many local powerholders facilitated the trade during this period to finance conflicts over territory and political campaigns. In some areas food crops were eradicated to make way for opium, contributing to famines in Guizhou and Shaanxi Provinces between 1921 and 1923, and food deficits in other provinces. Beginning in 1915, Chinese nationalist groups came to describe the period of military losses and
Unequal Treaties as the "
Century of National Humiliation", later defined to end with the conclusion of the
Chinese Civil War in 1949. In the northern provinces of
Ningxia and
Suiyuan in China,
Chinese Muslim General
Ma Fuxiang both prohibited and engaged in the opium trade. It was hoped that Ma Fuxiang would have improved the situation, since Chinese Muslims were well known for opposition to smoking opium. Ma Fuxiang officially prohibited opium and made it illegal in Ningxia, but the
Guominjun reversed his policy; by 1933, people from every level of society were abusing the drug, and Ningxia was left in destitution. In 1923, an officer of the
Bank of China from
Baotou found out that Ma Fuxiang was assisting the drug trade in opium which helped finance his military expenses. He earned from taxing those sales in 1923. General Ma had been using the bank, a branch of the Government of China's exchequer, to arrange for silver currency to be transported to Baotou to use it to sponsor the trade. The opium trade under the
Chinese Communist Party was important to its finances in the 1940s.
Peter Vladimirov's diary provided a first hand account.
Chen Yung-fa provided a detailed historical account of how the opium trade was essential to the economy of Yan'an during this period.
Mitsubishi and
Mitsui were involved in the opium trade during the Japanese occupation of China.
Mao Zedong government is generally credited with eradicating both consumption and production of opium during the 1950s using unrestrained repression and social reform. Ten million addicts were forced into compulsory treatment, dealers were executed, and opium-producing regions were planted with new crops. Remaining opium production shifted south of the Chinese border into the
Golden Triangle region.
Prohibition outside China There were no legal restrictions on the importation or use of opium in the United States until the San Francisco Opium Den Ordinance, which banned dens for public smoking of opium in 1875, a measure fueled by
anti-Chinese sentiment and the perception that whites were starting to frequent the dens. This was followed by an 1891 California law requiring that narcotics carry warning labels and that their sales be recorded in a registry; amendments to the California Pharmacy and Poison Act in 1907 made it a crime to sell opiates without a prescription, and bans on possession of opium or
opium pipes in 1909 were enacted. At the US federal level, the legal actions taken reflected constitutional restrictions under the
enumerated powers doctrine prior to reinterpretation of the
commerce clause, which did not allow the federal government to enact arbitrary prohibitions, but did permit arbitrary taxation. Beginning in 1883, opium importation was taxed at to per pound, until the Opium Exclusion Act of 1909 prohibited the importation of opium altogether. In a similar manner, the
Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914, passed in fulfillment of the
First International Opium Convention of 1912, nominally placed a tax on the distribution of opiates, but served as a
de facto prohibition of the drugs. Today, opium is regulated by the
Drug Enforcement Administration under the
Controlled Substances Act. The colonies of Queensland and South Australia along with the Northern Territory, where three of the four states of colonial Australia which still had large, yet unknown numbers of Aboriginal people living on Country in regional, remote and very remote locations. From time to time, this made in necessary for laws to be created so Australian’s living within the colony understood their responsibilities to society, and the law was working to ensure protection from potential exploitation, perceived or otherwise. By 1897 the passage of law in all three of the above locations had restricted the sale, exchange or trade of opium with any Aboriginal person without exception, this broad application was required to ensure the law was enforceable. Hardening of Canadian attitudes toward Chinese opium users and fear of a spread of the drug into the white population led to the effective criminalization of opium for nonmedical use in Canada between 1908 and the mid-1920s. In 1909, the
International Opium Commission was founded, and by 1914, 34 nations had agreed that the production and importation of opium should be diminished. In 1924, 62 nations participated in a meeting of the commission. Subsequently, this role passed to the
League of Nations, and all signatory nations agreed to prohibit the import, sale, distribution, export, and use of all narcotic drugs, except for medical and scientific purposes. This role was later taken up by the
International Narcotics Control Board of the United Nations under
Article 23 of the
Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and subsequently under the
Convention on Psychotropic Substances. Opium-producing nations are required to designate a
government agency to take physical possession of licit opium crops as soon as possible after harvest and conduct all wholesaling and exporting through that agency.
Regulation in Britain and the United States Before the 1920s, regulation in Britain was controlled by pharmacists. Pharmacists who were found to have prescribed opium for illegitimate uses and anyone found to have sold opium without proper qualifications would be prosecuted. With the passing of the Rolleston Act in Britain in 1926, doctors were allowed to prescribe opiates such as morphine and heroin if they believed their patients demonstrated a medical need. Because addiction was viewed as a medical problem rather than an indulgence, doctors were permitted to allow patients to wean themselves off opiates rather than cutting off any opiate use altogether. The passing of the Rolleston Act put the control of opium use in the hands of medical doctors instead of pharmacists. Later in the 20th century, addiction to opiates, especially heroin in young people, continued to rise and so the sale and prescription of opiates was limited to doctors in treatment centres. If these doctors were found to be prescribing opiates without just cause, then they could lose their licence to practice or prescribe drugs.
20th-century use Opium production in China and the rest of East Asia was nearly wiped out after
WWII; however, sustained covert support by the United States
Central Intelligence Agency for the
Thai Northern Army and the Chinese Nationalist
Kuomintang army invading Burma facilitated production and trafficking of the drug from Southeast Asia for decades, with the region becoming a major source of world supplies. During the Communist era in Eastern Europe, poppy stalks sold in bundles by farmers were processed by users with household chemicals to make
kompot ("
Polish heroin"), and poppy seeds were used to produce
koknar, an opiate.
Obsolescence Globally, opium has gradually been superseded by a variety of purified, semi-synthetic, and synthetic
opioids with progressively stronger effects, and by other
general anesthetics. This process began in 1804, when
Friedrich Wilhelm Adam Sertürner first isolated morphine from the opium poppy. The process continued until 1817, when Sertürner published his results after thirteen years of research and a nearly disastrous trial on himself and three boys. The great advantage of purified morphine was that a patient could be treated with a known dose—whereas with raw plant material, as
Gabriel Fallopius once lamented, "if soporifics are weak they do not help; if they are strong they are exceedingly dangerous." Morphine was the first pharmaceutical isolated from a natural product, and this success encouraged the isolation of other alkaloids: by 1820, isolations of
noscapine,
strychnine,
veratrine,
colchicine,
caffeine, and
quinine were reported. Morphine sales began in 1827, by
Heinrich Emanuel Merck of Darmstadt, and helped him expand his family pharmacy into the
Merck KGaA pharmaceutical company.
Codeine was isolated in 1832 by
Pierre Jean Robiquet. The use of
diethyl ether and
chloroform for
general anesthesia began in 1846–1847, and rapidly displaced the use of opiates and
tropane alkaloids from
Solanaceae due to their relative safety.
Heroin, the first semi-synthetic opioid, was first synthesized in 1874, but was not pursued until its rediscovery in 1897 by
Felix Hoffmann at the
Bayer pharmaceutical company in
Elberfeld,
Germany. From 1898 to 1910 heroin was marketed as a non-addictive morphine substitute and cough medicine for children. Because the lethal dose of heroin was viewed as a hundred times greater than its effective dose, heroin was advertised as a safer alternative to other opioids. By 1902, sales made up 5 percent of the company's profits, and "heroinism" had attracted media attention.
Oxycodone, a
thebaine derivative similar to
codeine, was introduced by Bayer in 1916 and promoted as a less-addictive analgesic. Preparations of the drug such as
oxycodone with paracetamol and
extended release oxycodone remain popular to this day. A range of synthetic
opioids such as
methadone (1937),
pethidine (1939),
fentanyl (late 1950s), and derivatives thereof have been introduced, and each is preferred for certain specialized applications. Nonetheless, morphine remains the drug of choice for American
combat medics, who carry packs of
syrettes containing 16 milligrams each for use on severely wounded soldiers. No drug has been found that can match the painkilling effect of
opioids without also duplicating much of their addictive potential. == Modern production and use ==