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History Unplugged Podcast

The History of Cannabis and Its Use By Humans

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

Society & Culture, History

4.23.7K Ratings

🗓️ 1 January 2019

⏱️ 68 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

History is often looked at through the perspective of a very high-up official. We look at military history through the eyes of a general. We look at political history through the eyes of a president or prime minister.

But what if we look at history through the perspective of drugs? Specifically, what if we look at history through the perspective of marijuana?

This isn't as gonzo of an idea as you might think. In my days as an Ottoman historian I knew someone doing his thesis on opium smuggling in Interwar Turkey and Beyond. The Opium Wars and the massive trade in opium between South Asia and China over the nineteenth century attest to the prominent role of opium within the history of colonialism and globalization.

Today I'm talking with David Bienestock, host of the Great Moments in Weed History about how hashish arrives in Europe via the Napoleonic invasion. In 1798, Napoleon invaded Egypt in a failed attempt to install colonial rule. French soldiers did succeed in enthusiastically adopting the local custom of consuming hashish, a practice with a long, storied history in the Islamic world. When the occupation ended, they brought a taste for cannabis home that lead directly to the formation of Paris’s famed Club des Hashischins, where Alexandre Dumas, Victor Hugo, Honoré de Balzac, and Charles Baudelaire drank coffee laced with marijuana.

In particular we discuss:

-- How the origin of the word “assassin” has to do with authorities looking down on consumers of hashish
-- Humanity's 10,000-year history with marijuana
-- How Europe first discover hashish during the Napoleonic occupation of Egypt

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the History Unplugged Podcast.

0:05.4

The unscripted show that celebrates unsung heroes, Mythbust's historical lies, and rediscoveres

0:11.9

the forgotten stories that changed our world.

0:15.5

I'm your host, Scott Rank.

0:20.5

So you just heard that tagline from my podcast where I say that, I celebrate unsung heroes,

0:28.1

Mythbust's historical lies and rediscovered forgotten stories that changed our world.

0:32.5

So one of the things that I'm trying to do with this podcast is something that a lot of

0:36.7

history podcasters do, and that's due revisionist history.

0:41.2

What that means is that you're trying to look at history from a different perspective than

0:45.8

it's usually looked at.

0:47.8

If you do military history, you're usually looking at things from the perspective of a

0:52.0

general.

0:53.0

If you're doing political history, you're usually looking at things from the perspective

0:56.8

of a president or prime minister, just looking at the big picture.

1:00.6

In this episode, we're really going to do revisionist history because we're going to look at history

1:05.2

through the perspective of illegal drugs, specifically through the perspective of marijuana.

1:12.0

Now this isn't as gondz of an idea as you might think.

1:15.8

In my days as an Ottoman historian, I knew someone doing his thesis on opium smuggling

1:20.6

in interwar Turkey and beyond.

1:23.3

The opium wars and the mass of trade in opium between South Asia and China in the 19th century

1:28.3

had a huge role in the history of colonialism and globalization.

1:33.4

Today specifically, I'm talking with David Beanenstock about how Hasheesh arrived in Europe

...

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