Research:1977-07-01/Journal article/tantric-cannabis-use-in-india: Difference between revisions
From Landrace.Wiki - The Landrace Cannabis Wiki
More actions
Eloise Zomia (talk | contribs) Created page with "{{ResearchItem |date=1977-07-01 |title=Tantric Cannabis Use in India |type=Journal article |authors=Michael R. Aldrich |venue=Journal of Psychedelic Drugs |year=1977 |doi=10.1080/02791072.1977.10472053 |source=http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/ujpd20 |pdf=https://blog.umamaya.com/wp-content/gold/Academic/Tantric_Cannabis_Use_in_India_Aldrich.pdf |summary=Primary ethnographic and textual analysis tracing ceremonial cannabis use in Indian Tantrism to three converging Vedic tr..." |
Eloise Zomia (talk | contribs) m Eloise Zomia moved page Research:2026-03-17/122557 to Research:1977-07-01/Journal article/tantric-cannabis-use-in-india without leaving a redirect: Auto-canonicalize ResearchItem title |
(No difference)
| |
Revision as of 19:45, 17 March 2026
1 Jul 1977 Journal article
India· Western Himalayas
Tantric Cannabis Use in India
Journal of Psychedelic Drugs· 1977
Primary ethnographic and textual analysis tracing ceremonial cannabis use in Indian Tantrism to three converging Vedic traditions: magical use of bhang (Atharva Veda, second millennium BC), divine poison-drinking mythology (Churning of the Milk Ocean), and drug yoga (oshadhi/siddhi). Provides the most detailed English-language description of the vijaya (cannabis milkshake) consecration ritual from the Mahanirvana Tantra (c. 11th century AD), including full sequence of mantras, mudras and meditative stages. Notes approximately 90-minute interval between ingestion and ritual climax corresponds to pharmacological onset of oral cannabis. Argues vijaya functions as essential "sense-heightener" not merely a disinhibitor. Reports Tantric practice peaked in medieval Bengal and Himalayan kingdoms; in Bengal cannabis called siddhi (pun on "occult powers"). Personal communication from Prof. Agehananda Bharati that as of mid-1960s no one performed full traditional ceremonies. Author affiliated with Fitz Hugh Ludlow Memorial Library, San Francisco.