NICHOLAS CULPEPER


Nicholas Culpeper

'Nicholas Culpeper' (18 October 16161654 in London) was an English botanist, herbalist, physician, and astrologer. His published books, ''The English Physitian'' (1652) and the ''Complete Herbal'' (1653), contain a rich store of pharmaceutical and herbal knowledge.
This famous physician, herbalist, and astrologer spent the greater part of his life ranging the hills and forests of England and cataloguing literally hundreds of medicinal herbs. Doctor Culpeper condemned the unnatural methods of his contemporaries, Culpeper wrote: "This not being pleasing, and less profitable tome, I consulted with my two brothers, DR. REASON and DR. EXPERIENCE, and took a voyage to visit my mother NATURE, by whose advice, together with the help of Dr. DILIGENCE, I at last obtained my desire; and, being warned by MR. HONESTY, a stranger in our days, to publish it to the world, I have done it." (From the Introduction to the 1835 Edition of The Complete Herbal.)

Contents
Life
His Philosophy of Herbalism and Medicine
Influence of Culpeper's Work
Examples cited from ''The English Physician''
Anecdotes
List of Works
Notes
References
See also
External links

Life


Son of Nicholas Culpeper (Senior), a clergyman, he studied in Cambridge, and afterwards became apprenticed to an apothecary Edward White. After seven years his master absconded with the money paid for his indenture, and soon afterwards his mother died of breast cancer.[1] A little later he married Alice Field, the daughter of a wealthy merchant, which allowed him to set up a pharmacy in the Halfway House in Spitalfields, London, outside the authority of the City of London. This was well-timed, since by the early 1640s medical facilities in London were at breaking point. Arguing that "no man deserved to starve to pay an insulting, insolent physician", and getting his herb supplies locally and from country areas of London (eg Finsbury Fields, Bow, Hampstead), he could afford not to charge fees. This, and a willingness (unusual for the time) to see patients in person rather than simply examining their urine (in his opinion, "as much piss as the Thames might hold" did not help in diagnosis), he saw forty people on some mornings. He also used astrology to explain the qualities of herbs and for diagnosis.
During the early months of the English Civil War he was accused of witchcraft and the Society of Apothecaries tried to rein in his practice. Alienated and radicalised, in August 1643, he joined the Trained Bands (the only Parliamentary infantry with proper training at the start of the war) and fought at the First Battle of Newbury. There he carried out battlefield surgery and himself sustained a serious chest injury from which he never recovered and was taken back to London. There, in co-operation with the Republican astrologer William Lilley, he wrote the work 'A Prophesy of the White King', which for the first time predicted the king’s death.
Influenced during his apprenticeship by the radical preacher John Goodwin, the 'Red Dragon', who said no authority was above question, Culpeper was a radical republican and opposed to the "closed shop" of medicine enforced by the censors of the College of Physicians. With Latin from his university education, he translated medical and herbal texts such as the London Pharmacoepia from the Latin for his master and then (when the Society of Physicians' police-force, the Censors, were out of action during the Civil War) published this translation to the general public (see ''Influence of Culpeper's Work'' below). He followed this up with a work on childbirth and his main work, 'The English Physician', sold at only 3 pence to make it more widely available and sold as far afield as colonial America. It is the most successful non-religious English text ever, and has been in continuous print.
He believed that medicine was a public asset not a commercial secret, and that nature's medicine was universal and cheap and only physicians' medicines were expensive. He felt the use of Latin and high prices by doctors, lawyers and priests was a conspiracy to keep power and freedom away from the general public, saying "Three kinds of people mainly disease the people - priests, physicians and lawyers - priests disease matters belonging to their souls, physicians disease matters belonging to their bodies, and lawyers disease matters belonging to their estate".
He died of tuberculosis on 10th January 1654 at the young age of 38. Only one of his eight children, Mary, survived to adulthood.



'Alternative Medicine'

This article is part of the CAM series of articles.


''


His Philosophy of Herbalism and Medicine


Culpeper worked to bring medicinal treatments from the mysterious to the comprehensible. His philosophy was to teach the common folk to minister to themselves by providing them with the tools and knowledge for self health. His mind and ambition was to reform the whole system of medicine by being an innovative questioner paving the way for new thoughts and principles contrary to established traditions. The systematization of the use of herbals by Culpeper was a key development in the evolution of modern pharmaceuticals, most of which originally had herbal origins.[1].

Influence of Culpeper's Work


In a new report by Mike Sajna,Mike Sajna, ''Herbs have a place in modern medicine, lecturer says'', in 'University Times:' Vomue 30, Number 4, October 9, 1997, University of Pittsburgh, USA. research indicates that Culpeper was one of the first translators into English of herbal and medicinal documents derived from an Aztec physician written in Latin. At a C.F. Reynolds Medical History Society Lecture in 1997, Michael Flannery said that:
A publication of Culpeper's 1653 translation work appeared in 1770 with the title '' The English Patient with 369 Medicines Made of English Herbs''. The 440 page work reveals that the origin of modern pharmaceuticals began with this work. The origin of Medical use of herbs such as foxglove, from which the heart medication digitalis was purified, is described in detail.[2]
William Warren-Davis, a naturopath, explains that:

Examples cited from ''The English Physician''


Herb remedies published in the book:[3]

Anemone - the juyce snuffed up the nose purgeth the head, it clenseth filthy ulcerts, encreaseth milk in Nurses, and outwardly by oyntments helps Leprosies.

Bedstraw - stancheth blood; boyled in oyl is good to annoynt a weary traveller; inwardly it provokes lust.

Burdoc or Clot-bur - helps such as spit blood and matter, bruised and mixed with salt and applyed to the place, helps the biting of mad dogs. It expels wind, easeth paines of the teeth, strengthens the back...being taken inwardly.

Cottonweed - boyled in Ly, it keeps the head from Nits and Lice; being laid among Cloaths, it Keeps them safe from Moths; taken in a Tobacco-pipe it helps Coughs of the Lunges, and vehement headaches.

Dittany - brings away dead children, hastens womens travail, the very smell of it drives away venomous beasts; it's an admirable remedy against wounds made with poysoned weapons; it draws out splinters, broken bones, etc.

Fleabane - helps the bitings of venomous beasts. It being burnt, the smoke of it kills as Gnats and Fleas in the chamber. It is dangerous for women with child.

Hellebore - the root of white Hellebore, or sneezwort, being grated & snuffed up the nose, causeth sneezing, Kill Rats and Mice, being mixed with their meat. Doctor Bright commends it for such as are mad through melancholly. If you use it for sneezing, let your head and neck be wrapped hot for fear of physicianching cold.

Lovage - cleers the sight, take away redness and Freckles from the Face.

Mugwort - an herb appropriate to the foeminine sex; it brings down the terms, brings away birth and afterbirth, easeth pains in the matrix.

Penyroyal - strengthens women's backs, provokes the Terms, staies vomiting, strengthens the brain (yea the very smell of it), breaks wind, and helps the Vertigo.

Savory - winter savory and summer savory both expel wind gallantly, and that (they say) is the reason why they are boyled with Pease and Beans and other such windy things; 'tis a good fashion and pitty it should be left.

Wood Bettony - helps the falling sickness, and all headaches coming of cold, procures apetite, helps sour belchings, helps cramps and convulsions, helps the Gout, Kills worms, helps bruises, and cleanseth women after their labor.
See List of plants in The English Physitian (1652 book)

Anecdotes


Culpeper was a radical, though by no means the quack that his contemporaries made him out to be. In fact, he had angered his fellow physicians by condemning their greed, unwillingness to adapt to new knowledge, and 'toxic' remedies along with their practice of blood-letting. The Society of Apothecaries were similarly incensed by the fact that he suggested cheap herbal remedies as opposed to their expensive concoctions. Nonetheless, Culpeper was keen on astrology, a fact used against him by his opponents.[4]
Beyond this, he also wrote one of the first texts on gynaecology and obstetrics and translated numerous texts into English to the chagrin of more of his contemporaries still. His influence is demonstrated by the existence of a chain of "Culpeper" herb and spice shops in the United Kingdom, India and beyond, and by the continued popularity of his remedies among New Age and alternative holistic homeopathy medicine practitioners.[5]

List of Works



★ ''A Physical Directory, or a Translation of the London Directory'' (1649) - translation of the ''Pharmacopoeia Londonesis'' of the Royal College of Physicians.

★ ''Directory for Midwives'' (1651)

★ ''Semeiotics Uranica'', or (An Astrological Judgement of Diseases) (1651)

★ ''Catastrophe Magnatum'' or (The Fall of Monarchy) (1652)

★ ''The English Physitian'' (1652)

★ ''The Complete Herbal'' (1653)

★ ''A Treatise on Aururn Potabile'' (1656)

Notes


1. see also| ebookcdrom.com/Pharmacology/The_English_Physician, in the ''References''
2. see ebookcdrom.com/Pharmacology/The_English_Physician, in the ''References''
3. see also, ebookcdrom.com/Pharmacology/The_English_Physician, in the ''References'' once again
4. ebooks.com commentary, quoted above.
5. another quote from the ebooks.com commentary, quoted above.

References



★ 1995. ''Culpeper's complete herbal. A book of natural remedies for ancient ills'' (Ware, Wordsworth edition).

★ 2004. ''The Herbalist: Nicholas Culpeper and the Fight for Medical Freedom.'' Benjamin Woolley. HarperCollins.

★ ebookscdrom.com http://www.ebookcdrom.com/Pharmacology/The_English_Physician.html

See also



Alternative medicine

Herbalism

History of pharmacology

History of science

Medical science

Medicines

Pharmacology,

Pharmaceutics,

Pharmacognosy

List of plants in The English Physitian (1652 book)

External links



Culpeper's The English Physitian - (1652)

The Complete Herbal (1653)

This Sceptered Isle (BBC)

Biography of Culpeper

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves