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This
2500-year-old coin shows how important silphium was to the ancient Greeks
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A
twenty five hundred year old Cyrenian coin bears a puzzling image.
A regal woman sits on
a chair, touching a plant with one hand. Her other hand points to
her genitals. To the
uninitiated the meaning of the picture might range from the
unfathomable to the slightly "kinky." To the ancient peoples who saw this coin and circulated it in
their daily commerce, the images were crystal clear. The plant, called silphion by the Greeks and silphium by the
Romans, was one of those most valuable in the ancient world and
the woman's presence provides a frank, if demure, reminder of why.
Silphium, was an herbal morning-after pill, readily
available to our ancestors a hundred generations ago.
In
the seventh century BC, Greek colonists established the city of
Cyrene on the Libyan coast. Shortly after their arrival, wrote the
Greek botanist Theophrastus (ca. 370-288 BC), they discovered
silphium -- the plant that would make them rich and the city
famous. A
member of the genus Feula,
(commonly known as giant fennel), a large group of plants with
deeply divided leaves and yellow flowers, the pungent sap from
silphium's stems and roots was used in cough syrups.
It also gave food a rich distinctive taste when used as an
additive. Of far greater importance was its value as a birth
control agent.
Contraceptive
and Abortive
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Asafoetida
was widely used in ancient times
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Contemporary
medical authorities were universal in their praise for silphium's
value as a contraceptive. The
Roman physician Soranus, antiquity's foremost gynecologist, wrote
that women should drink
the juice from an amount of silphium about the size of a chick
pea, with water, once a month since "it not only prevents
conception but also destroys anything existing." The
herbalist and pharmacist, Dioscorides, author of Materia Medica, recommended silphium for contraceptive and abortive
purposes.
Anecdotal
references to the plant's value as a birth control agent is also
found in contemporary non-medical literature.
The first century BC Roman poet Catullus wondered how many
"kisses" he and his girlfriend Lesbia might enjoy.
The answer -- "as many grains of sand as there are on
Cyrene's silphium shores."
The fifth century BC Athenian playwright Aristophanes
mentions it in one of his bawdy comedies, The
Knights.
Within
a few centuries the supply of silphium was nearly gone. The plant only grew in a band about 125 miles long and 30
miles wide on the Libyan mountainsides facing the Mediterranean
Sea. Attempts to
cultivate silphium in Greece and Syria failed and by the 1st
century AD, Pliny the Elder reported in Natural
History that silphium was worth more than its weight in silver
and that "only a single stalk had been found in Cyrene within
our memory." By the second century it was extinct.
While
silphium was considered to be the most effective herbal
contraceptive of the classical world, not everyone could afford it
and there were always other substitutes. Another
member of the Ferula species, asafoetida, which gives Worcestershire sauce its
distinctive aroma, was also widely used
(though considered less effective) since it was cheaper and
more abundant.
Besides
silphium and asafoetida, other plants were recognized as having
both contraceptive and abortificant properties by ancient women.
Hippocrates "the father of medicine" stated the
seeds of Queen Anne's Lace, or wild carrot, when taken orally both
prevented and terminated pregnancy and recommended their use.
Herbal
Contraceptives in Ancient Literature
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Hippocrates
cautions that pennyroyal is toxic and must be taken in precisely
calculated amounts
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Other
plants used in classical times as contraceptives included
pennyroyal, artemisia, myrrh and rue.
In Aristophanes' 421 BC comedy The
Peace, Hermes provides Trigaius with a female companion.
Trigaius wonders if the woman might become pregnant.
"Not if you add a dose of pennyroyal," advises
Hermes. Hippocrates
also mentions the value of pennyroyal as a birth control agent
though cautions that it is toxic and has to be taken in precisely
calculated amounts.
Galen
(AD 129-199), the foremost physician in the Roman world, and
Dioscorides also recommended the use of pomegranate for birth
control. The seeds
were typically used as a pessary, (vaginal suppository), though
one contemporary medical text documents use of pomegranate seed
being taken orally as a post-coital contraceptive. The best known
literary reference to the pomegranate's contraceptive power is the
Greek myth of Persephone and Hades.
Persephone had eaten six pomegranate kernels while in the
underworld and for that many months the land was infertile during
the fall and winter.
Fact
or Superstitious Legend?
Myths,
legends, hearsay and ancient texts are not the only evidence that
people were regulating
births in the ancient world.
Historical demographic studies indicate that in the first
five centuries AD - a period of few wars or major epidemics, the
population of the Roman Empire declined, while at the same time
life expectancy increased. Attempts
to attribute the decline to infanticide have not been supported by
skeletal evidence, which shows less children being born per woman.
The Greek historian Ploybius, speaking of what was
happening in the cities, said families were limiting their size to
one or two children.
Were
the herbal contraceptives and early term abortificants
responsible? For
centuries historians paid little attention to ancient accounts of
plants possessing birth control properties, referring them as
"ineffectual potions." Modern laboratory analyses
however suggest that the plants
used in these potions were effective and ancient women probably
had more control over their reproductive lives than previously
thought.
Silphium
cannot be tested but experiments using
crude extracts of asafoetida in rats, showed that it inhibited
implantation of fertilized ova at rates up to 50 percent. Extracts
of asafoetida's close relatives were nearly 100 percent effective
in preventing pregnancy when given within three days of mating.
In 1986 it was shown that compounds in Queen Anne's Lace
blocked the production of progesterone, necessary for preparation
of the uterus for a fertilized ovum.
Women in rural North Carolina and Rajasthan, India both use
the seeds to prevent pregnancy.
Pennyroyal contains a substance, pulegone, that terminates
pregnancies in both humans and animals.
If
these herbal remedies did work, and classical era women did indeed
access contraceptive methods that really worked -- why, then, did
the knowledge fade away?
Historian
John M. Riddle suggests two primary factors.
One was the change of medicine from something that
virtually anyone could practice to the special province of men
with formal training. Since
the use of herbal birth-control agents was probably in the hands
of women, it remained outside the canon of male-administered
medicine, passed on by word of mouth and used mainly by those
without access to the costlier professional physicians.
Second,
from the Renaissance on, physicians distrusted folk medicine and
usually treated it with disdain and ridicule.
These negative attitudes about traditional medicine, herbal
or otherwise, eventually pervaded throughout western society and
the loss of folk knowledge about herbal contraception was almost
complete.
Regardless
of what happened to break the learning chain and why, the evidence
is clear on one point -- women in antiquity had significant
control over their reproductive lives.
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David
Tschanz is a medical/military historian currently based
in Saudi Arabia . He is also an epidemiologist, web developer,
editor and demographer. You may contact him by sending your emails
to: Desertwriter1121@yahoo.com.