The first (probable...and confused) reference to Iboga is that of
Bowdich in chapter 13 of his "Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee..." of 1819The Eroga, a favourite but violent medicine, is no doubt a fungus, for they describe it as growing on a tree called the Ocamboo, when decaying; they burn it first, and take as much as would lay on a shilling. If this is indeed a reference to the drug derived from
Tabernanthe iboga (
Eroga appears to be a variant form of the names
iboga and
eboka) it is, of course, grossly in error in its assumption that iboga is not a plant but a fungus. Notable however is the observation of the potency of the drug – effective in small quantities. The description of the plant as growing on a tree is puzzling:
Tabernanthe iboga does not usually grow as an
epiphyte – if at all. The ritual use of iboga in Africa was first reported by French and Belgian explorers in the 19th century, beginning with the work of French
naval surgeon and explorer of
Gabon Griffon du Bellay, who identified it correctly as a shrub belonging to the Apocynaceae – as recorded in a short essay by Charles Eugène Aubry-Lecomte on the plant poisons of West Africa, published in the year 1864. Parmi les plantes rares ou nouvelles rapportées par le docteur Griffon du Bellay, la famille des apocynées contient encore deux poisons; l'un, nommé iboga, n'est toxique qu'à hautes doses et a l'état frais. Pris en petit quantité, il est aphrodisiaque et stimulante du systeme nerveux; les guerriers et chasseurs en font grand usage pour se tenir éveillés dans les affûts de nuit; de même que pour le ''M'boundou'', le principe actif réside dans la racine qu'on mâche comme la coca. [ Translation: Among the rare or new plants brought back by Dr. Griffon du Bellay, the plant family Apocynaceae contains two further poisons; the first of these, called
Iboga, is only toxic in high doses and in the fresh state. Taken in small quantities, it is an aphrodisiac and stimulant of the (central)
nervous system; warriors and hunters make considerable use of it in order to stay awake during their night vigils; as with the (plant) ''M'boundou'', the active principle (of Iboga) resides in the root which is chewed like coca (leaf) ]. ==Chemistry==