Oh, one other thing I forgot to mention. In addition to really brief notes on the content of articles, quotations from the very earliest sources referring to an entheogen are also appreciated. We probably won't use too many of them, but I find that having some of those early quotes from the people who first observed a particular entheogen in use can really add flavor.
I'll start with notes on the history of the psychoactive bindweeds, since I recently made a post about that.
Psychoactive bindweedsTurbina corymbosa, Ipomoea violacea, Ipomoea carnea*Sahagún, Bernardino de. 1982.
Historia General de las Casas de Nueva España. Editorial Porrúa, México City, Mexico.
*Rätsch, Christian. 2005.
Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants. Park Street Press: Rochester, VT. Translated by John R. Baker with Annabel Lee and Cornelia Ballent. Foreword by Albert Hofmann. Originally published in German, 1998. AT Verlag Aarau / Switzerland.
(Translation below from Rätsch 2005)
Quote:[The] leaves [of the coaxihuitl (snakeplant)] are slender and ropelike, small. Its name is ololiuhqui. It inebriates one; it makes one crazy, stirs one up, makes one mad, makes one possessed. He who eats of it, he who drinks it, sees many things that will make him afraid to a high degree. He is truly terrified of the great snake that he sees for this reason.
He who hates people causes one to swallow it in drink and in food to make one mad. But it smells sour; it burns a little in the throat. It is applied on the surface alone to treat gout.
*Hernández, Francisco. 2005.
Rerum Medicarum Novae Hispaniae Thesaurus, seu Plantarum, Animalium, Mineralium Mexicanorum Historia. Rome.
- Ololiuhqui reported to be taken by priests when to contact their gods, said to induce "visions and satanic hallucinations"
*Durán, Diego. 1977.
Book of the Gods and Rites and the Ancient Calendar. Civilization of the American Indian series (Vol. 102). University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, OK. (Translated and edited by Fernando Horcasitas and Doris Heyden. Original in Spanish, 1574-1576)
*Acosta, José de. 1604.
The Natural and Moral History of the Indies. Val. Sims, London. Translated by Edward Grimston. Original in Spanish, published 1590 in Seville.
*Clavijero, Francisco Xavier. 1807.
The History of Mexico: collected from Spanish and Mexican historians, from manuscripts and ancient paintings of the indians, illustrated by charts, and other copper plates, to wich are added, critical dissertations on the land, the animals, and inhabitants of Mexico. Joyce Gold, London, England. Original in Spanish, published 1780 as
La Historia Antigua de México. Translated by Charles Cullen.
* Schultes, Richard Evans. 1941.
A Contribution to Our Knowledge of Rivea corymbosa
, the Narcotic ololiuqui of the Aztecs. Harvard Botanical Museum, Cambridge, MA.
- Reported ololiuhqui is mixed with ash, crushed insects, pitch, and tobacco to make a salve thought to protect the wearer from evil, used to anoint their priests before a human sacrifice. Salve was known as "teotlcualli" [="God's Flesh"].
*Alarcón, Hernando Ruiz de. 1984.
Treatise on the Heathen Superstitions That Today Live Among the Indians Native to This New Spain. University of Oklahoma Press, London, England. Translated and edited by Andrews, Richard J. and Ross Hassig. Original in Spanish, 1629. Includes Pedro Ponce's
Brief Relation of the Gods and Rites of Heathenism.
*Serna, Jacinto de la. 1656.
Manual de Ministros de Indios para el Conocimiento de sus Idolatrias y Extirpación de Ellas. Mexico City, Mexico.
*Schultes, Richard Evans. 1941.
A Contribution to Our Knowledge of Rivea corymbosa
, the Narcotic ololiuqui of the Aztecs. Harvard Botanical Museum, Cambridge, MA.
-The Aztecs and other Mexican Indians consulted ololiuhqui for medical and divinatory purposes (finding lost items, diagnosing disease, seeking advice on how to treat a disease), sometimes taken by the patient, other times by the doctor. They tried hard to hide the seeds from the Catholic Missionaries both because they'd be tortured for idolatry and they were afraid to offend the ololiuhqui.
*Ponce, Pedro. 1984.
Brief Relation of the Gods and Rites of Heathenism. In Alarcón:
Treatise on the Heathen Superstitions That Today Live Among the Indians Native to This New Spain. University of Oklahoma Press, London, England. Translated and edited by Andrews, Richard J. and Ross Hassig. Original in Spanish circa 1629.
-First and only known mention of "tlitliltzin" [="divine black one"] as similar in use to but botanically distinct from peyotl and ololiuhqui. May refer to
Ipomoea violacea seeds.
*Aguirre Beltrán, Gonzalo. 1955.
Medicina y Magica.Mexico D.F., Mexico.
-Relates a story from the unpublished records of the inquisition, an African slave who acted also as a curandero talks
about an "ololiuhqui del moreno", which Beltrán indicates was his way of saying "black ololiuqui"... may be interpreted as referring to
I. violacea seeds.
Re-rediscovery:
*Reko, Blas Pablo. 1919. "De los nombres botánicos Aztecas"
El Mexico Antiguo 1(5): 115-157.
*Reko, Blas Pablo. 1929. "Alcaloides y glucósidos en plantas mexicanas"
Memorial de la Sociedad Alzate 49: 412.
*Reko, Blas Pablo. 1934. "Das mexikanische Rauschgift Ololiuhqui"
El México Antiguo 3(3-4): 1-7
*Schultes, Richard Evans. 1941.
A Contribution to Our Knowledge of Rivea corymbosa
, the Narcotic ololiuqui of the Aztecs. Harvard Botanical Museum, Cambridge, MA.
-Use of ololiuhqui seeds went underground for centuries in reaction to the tortures imposed on practitioners by the Catholic Church. In the first half of 20th century, reports again began to emerge of the widespread use of the seeds throughout rural Oaxaca, Mexico. Uses were nearly identical to conquest era (divination & magico-medical, both with strong religious overtones) only the religious dimension had shifted to adopt the tropes of Christianity (Jesus, mother Mary, the saints)
*Reko, Blas Pablo. 1945.
Mitobotánica Zapoteca Privately published, Tacubaya, Mexico.
*MacDougall, Tómas. 1960. "
Ipomea [
sic]
tricolor a hallucenogenic [
sic] plant of the Zapotecs"
Boletín del Centro de Investigaciones Antropológicas de México 6: 6-8
*Parsons, E.C. 1936.
Mitla - Town of the Souls University of Chicago Press: Chicago, IL.
*Wasson, R. Gordon. 1963. "Notes on the present status of ololiuqui and the other hallucinogens of Mexico"
Botanical Museum Leaflets Harvard University 20(6): 161-193.
-Around the same period, use of
Ipomoea violacea in a manner nearly identical to ololiuhqui was observed in several parts of Oaxaca, particularly among the Mazatec (Reko 1945) and the Zapotec (McDougall 1960, Parsons 1936). It is subsequently suggested that
I. violacea may be the tlitliltzin that Ponce mentioned in the early 17th century (Wasson 1963)... While the evidence on the subject is scarce, it is a sound conjecture, and if true establishes the use of the seeds to go back at least four centuries
*Garza, Mercedes de la. 1990.
Sueño y Allucinacíon en el Mundo Náhuatl y Maya. Universidad Nac. Autónoma de México, Mexico City.
-
I. violacea also used among the Mayans
*Lipp, Frank J. 1991.
The Mixe of Oaxaca: Religion, Ritual and Healing. University of Texas Press, Austin, TX.
-Both
I. violacea and
T. corymbosa are used by the Mixe
*Baumgartner, Daniela. 1994. "Das Priesterwesen der Kogi"
Yearbook for ethnomedicine and the study of consciousness 1994 (3): 171-198
*Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo. 1978. "The loom of life: A Kogi principle of integration"
Journal of Latin American Lore 4: 5-27
*Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo. 1987. "The Great Mother and the Kogi universe: A concise overview"
Journal of Latin American Lore 13: 73-113
-In the Sierra Madre of Columbia, the Kogi use a related bindweed (which has not yet been identified conclusively) as an entheogen.
*Naranjo, P. 1969. "Etnofarmacología de las plantas psicotrópicas de América"
Terapía 24: 5-63.
*Lascano, C.
et al. 1967. "Estudios fitoquímico de la especie psicotomimética
Ipomoea carnea"
Ciencias Naturales 9: 3
-In Ecuador, the related species
Ipomoea carnea is used as an entheogen.
That should cover the rediscovery era.
As to the archaeological evidence, it's difficult to say with certainty. There are native pre-Columbian frescos that show vines that
might be intended to represent these plants, but if so, they've taken
extreme liberties with such basics as the shape of the leaf.
There was one reference to the use of the seeds as an enema in antiquity, but I've been unable to track down the source: De Smet, P.A.G.M, and F.J. Lipp. 1987. "Supplementary data on ritual enemas and snuffs in the western hemisphere"
Journal of Ethnopharmacology 19(3): 327-331.
So if anyone has access to the online Journal of Ethnopharmacology archives from 1987, please please shoot me a PM.