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Xanderviceory

PostPosted: Thu Aug 24, 2006 7:50 pm


THE
ENCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA,
OR
DICTIONARY
OF
ARTS, SCIENCES, AND GENERAL LITERATURE.

EIGHTH EDITION.
1856

WITH EXTENSIVE IMPROVEMENTS AND ADDITIONS;
AND NUMEROUS ENGRAVINGS.

VOLUME XI

LITTLE, BROWN, AND CO., BOSTON, U.S.
MDCCLVI.

[The Proprietors of this Work give notice that they reserve the right
of Translating it.]

(skip to page 311, bottom right to find smile

HEMP, a tough fibre yielded by the large annual plant
_Cannabis sativa_, of the natural order Cannabinaceae. There are,
however, several other fibres known in commerce to which the term is
more or less commonly applied. for example - Jute hemp is obtained
from _Corchorus capsularis_ and _C. olitorius; Manilla hemp from _Musa
textilis_; Brown hemp from _Hibiscus canabinus; Pite or Pita hemp from
several species of agave and aloe; Sunn hemp, Madras hemp, brown
Bombay hemp and Malabar hemp, from _Crotalaria juncea_; Jubbulpore
hemp, from _Crotalaria tenuifolia_, and several others.

The true hemp (_Cannabis sativa_) has been recognised as a
useful plant from a very early period, although probably not of the
same antiquity as flax. Herodotus is the first writer who mentions
it (iv. 74), but he speaks of it in a manner which shows it must have
been then well-known, for he describes the hempen garments made by the
Thracians as being equal to linen (flax cloth) in fineness. Its use
for making cordage is noted as early as 200 years B.C. by Moschion,
who mentions that a large ship, the "syracusia," built by Hiero II,
was rigged with ropes made from hemp brought from the Rhone.

The original country of the hemp-plant is not positively
known, but it is generally believed to have been the mountainous
districts in the extreme north of India, whence it spread westward
through Europe, and southward through the peninsula of India. Its
cultivation in each direction had in all probability a different
object; for it is found to produce under tropical culture an inferior
fibre, and a powerfully intoxicating drug, but in cold and temperate
climates it yields an abundance of strong fibres in great perfection
for textile purposes, and loses its narcotic qualities. The
similarity of its name in various languages is a strong indication
that it has taken the course here indicated; thus, in the Sanscrit it
is called _goni_, _sana_, or _shanapu_; Persic, _canna_; Arabic,
_kanneh_ or _kinnub; Greek, _kannabis_; Latin, _cannabis_; Italian,
_canapa_; French, _chanvre_ or _chanbre_; Danish, _kamp_ or _kennep_;
Lettish and Lithuanian, _kannapes_; Slavonic, _konopi_; Erse,
_canaib_; Scaninavian, _hampr_; Swedish, _hampa_; German, _hauf_;
Anglo-Saxon, _haenep_; and English, _hemp_. In India other names are
applied, indicative of its intoxicating or narcotic powers; thus,
according to Dr Royle, it is called the "increaser of pleasure," the
"exciter of desire," the "cementer of friendship," the "causer of the
reeling gait," the "laughter mover," &c.; and he also suggests that it
may have been the _nepenthes_ ("assuager of grief") of Homer, given by
Helen to Telemachus.

The intoxicating properties of hemp reside in a peculiar
resinous extract naturally secreted by the plant when growing in a hot
climate. So remarkable is this peculiarity, that botanists until
lately insisted upon the hemp of India being a distinct species (_C.
indica_). It is now, however, decided that there is really no
specific difference, the change being simply climatal.

The secretion is deposited by exudation upon the surface of
the leaves, the slender branches, and the flowers. According to Dr
O'Shaughnessy, it is collected during the hot season by men clad in
leathern dresses, who rush with violence through the hemp fields; the
resin adheres to their dresses, from which it is scraped off and
kneaded into lumps which have the appearance of pieces of linseed oil
cake in colour and texture, and a peculiar and by no means agreeable
smell. In this state it is called "churrus;" and there are evidently
several varieties of the substance, as Dr Pereira describes it as
being "in masses of the shape and size of a hen's egg, or of a small
lemon, and formed by the adhesion of superimposed elongated pieces. It
has dull grayish-brown colour, and not much odour;" whereas one
specimen in the writer's collection differs in being in large
shapeless fragments of the colour of amber, with the loose friable
texture of linseed cake, and a heavy unpleasant odour. Another
specimen has a resinous lustre, a dark brown colour, and is formed
into an elongated oval shape, but not larger than half a hen's egg.
This is almost odourless, and is probably the _momeea_ or _waxen
churrus_, said to be collected with great care by the hand, and to be
highly prized. The dried plant after it has flowered, and from which
the churrus has not been removed, is compressed into bundles of
twenty-four plants each, and is sold in the bazaars of India under the
name of gunjah. The larger leaves and capsules, without the stalks,
are also compressed into irregular sized masses, which receive the
names of bang, subjee, or sidhee, in India. The hashish of the
Arabians consists of the tops of the small branchlets after
inflorescence, carefully gathered and dried. Both this and the two
previously mentioned preparations are extensively used for smoking and
chewing - the gunjah and bang in India and Persis, and the hashish in
Africa. When the bushmen of Southern Africa were brought to England,
they passed much of their time in smoking this narcotic in pipes made
of the long teeth of alligators, hollowed out for the purpose. Its
use as a means of intoxication is said to have given rise to our word
assassin, from the fact that the low Saracen soldiery, called
_hashashins_, when intoxicated with hashish, were sent into the camps
of the crusaders for the purpose of killing whomsoever they met, the
drug rendering them quite regardless of the consequences. The
physiological effects of the various preparations above mentioned are
most remarkable, and are unlike every other narcotic at present known.
It produces inebriation and delirium of decidedly hilarious character,
inducing violent laughter, jumping and dancing. The writer several
times witnessed its effects upon the bushmen. After inhaling the
smoke for some time they rose and began a very slow dance, which was
gradually quickened until they became perfectly frenzied, and finally
fell down in a state of complete insensiblity, from which they were a
considerable time in recovering. Dr O'Shaughnessy relates some most
remarkable effects of the churrus, particularly its power in producing
a state of true catalepsy. The same effects do not appear to take
place upon Europeans, but this point has not yet been fairly tried, as
the drug evidently suffers some change in its transmission by sea.

But it is not as a narcotic and excitant that the hemp plant
is most useful to mankind; it is as an advancer rather than a retarder
of civilization, that its utility is made most manifest. Its great
value as a textile material, particularly for cordage and canvas, has
made it eminently useful; and if we were to copy the figurative style
of the Sanscrit writers, we might with justice call it the
"accelerator of commerce," and the "spreader of wealth and intellect."
for ages man has been dependent upon hempen cordage and hempen sails
for enabling his ships to cross the seas; and in this respect it still
occupies a most important place in our commercial affairs.

For its valuable fibre hemp is very largely cultivated in
Europe, but chiefly in Russia and Russian Poland. It undergoes the
same process for decomposing the parts of the stem as that described
in the article on FLAX, called _water-retting_, by which the cellular
tissue of the bark and medulla is destroyed, and the long fibres of
the woody part are set free. This is not done by simply soaking in
the waters of ponds and streams, for it requires to be dried both
previously and subsequently to the retting process; after which it is
beaten with wooden beetles or mallets, or by an apparatus called a
_break_ or _brake_ worked by a treddle. Sometimes, however, this
laborious operation is effected by water or steam-power. Some of the
finer kinds of hemp are more carefully prepared; the seed is sown
broad-cast instead of in drills, by which the stems are grown more
slender and the fibres finer; and after the water-retting each stem is
taken in the hand, and the epidermis is stripped or _peeled_ off, and
the reed or boon is then submitted as before mentioned to the
_breaking_ process. In both cases after _breaking_ the stalks are
conveyed to the _scutching-mills_, where the separation of the fibres
is still further effected by rubbing and striking, after which it is
heckled or hackled - the heckler taking as much as he can conveniently
hold and drawing it through a number of iron spikes fixed in a board
forming a kind of comb.

The process called dew-retting, described in the article on
FLAX, is also adopted for very fine varieties of hemp, such as the
white crown Marienburg, and the Italian garden hemp; and in Russia and
Sweden another method called snow-retting is used. After the first
fall of snow the hemp which has been put up in stacks is spread out
over the snow, and left to be buried by successive falls. It thus
remains covered until the snow disappears, and is then sufficiently
retted.

We have hitherto received the largest quantity of hemp from
Russia - St Petersburg, Memel, and Riga being the chief ports of
shipment; but the late war, which put a stop to the supply from this
source, is likely to produce a beneficial result to our colonies. The
indefatigable exertions of Dr Royle on behalf of the Indian government
have led to the knowledge of various fibrous substances which are
prodeuced in the greatest abundance in our Indian empire, in the
manufacture of cordage and canvas; so that having been forced into a
knowledge of our own resources, it is not probable we shall ever be so
dependent upon Russia in future for this necessary article.

The best substitute appears to be the Caloee or Rheea fibre
produced by a plant of the nettle tribe (Urticaccae), _Boehmeria
nivea_. The Rheea fibre can, it is expected, be produced very much
cheaper than Russian hemp, and it is nearly twice as strong. Hitherto
hemp has had one great advantage over all other fibres in the
manufacture of cordage, and it remains to be seen whether the Rheea
fibre has this qualification. When a hempen rope is worn out, if it
has not been tarred, it is valuable for making paper; and if it has
been tarred, it is even more useful for oakum. This is not the case
certainly with the fine ropes of Manilla hemp (_Musa textilis_),
which, though stronger than the best Russian hemp, are almost useless
when worn out. The same may be said of the admirable coir ropes now
so extensively used for ship's hawsers and other corage exposed to
water. These ropes are made of the fibres from the husk of the common
cocoa-nut.

The fibre called New Zealand flax, which is procured from
the long sword-shaped leaves of _Phormium tenax_, a liliaceous plant,
has been much recommended of late; but whether from the difficulty of
preparing it, or from the inadequacy of the supply, it has not yet
become a regular article of commerce. The epidermis of its leaves is
more compact and harder than that of the stalks of the plants
previously mentioned, and this may cause great difficulty both in
retting and scutching.

We import hemp from Russia, Italy, Holland, Turkey, the East
Indies, and latterly from the United States. That from America,
however, is of inferior quality and blackish colour. The East Indian
hemp is coarse, and is in small hanks plaited about the thickness of a
man's arm. The Italian hemp is very fine, that variety called
garden-hemp being the longest of any kind; its superiority is supposed
to be the result of spade culture in very suitable soil. It is also
as white and soft as the finest white Russian.

Of the Russian kinds the St Petersburg clean and the Riga
rein (or clean) are the best for general purposes. The variety called
white crown Marienburg is remarkably short, white and soft; it is only
fit for fine canvas.

The quantity of hemp imported into the United Kingdom was-

From Russia | From other countries.
In 1851.........33,229 tons | In 1851..........31,441 tons
.. 1852.........26,857 .... | .. 1852..........26,551 ....
.. 1853.........40,320 .... | .. 1853..........20,619 ....
.. 1854......... 1,044 .... | .. 1854..........35,927 ....
.. 1855......... nil. .... | .. 1855..........28,010 ....

The price of Russian hemp has ranged from L38 to L90
(L=pound) per ton during the last five years, the maximum price being
caused by the war. Considerable quantities are also raised in England
and Ireland.

Of the figures just given those relating to Russia may be
depended upon, but those referring to the imports from other countries
are by no means satisfactory; for owing to the slovenly manner in
which our commercial statistics are collected by the government, all
articles which bear the trade name of hemp are included, such as
Manilla hemp, and very often even jute.

There is one other useful quality in the hemp plant; it
produces an abundance of seed, which not only yields a valuable oil,
but the seed is extensively used in feeding singing birds. As the
hemp is _diaecious_, only about one half the plants produce seeds; but
these yield it in such abundance that an acre will yield from three to
four quarters at about 40s. per quarter. As this is independent of
the fibre produced it is a profitable crop in countries like Russia
where the land is not too valuable.

For fuller information upon the subject consult Dr Royle's
_Illustrations of the Botany of the Himalayan Mountains_, and his
_Fibrous Plants of India_; Dr. O'Shaughnessy on the _Preparation of
the Indian Hemp or Gunjah_; and the erudite work _Textrinum
Antiquorum_, by James Yates, Esq., M.A. (T.C.A.)
PostPosted: Thu Aug 24, 2006 7:51 pm


Encyclopaedia Britannica
Eleventh Edition
1910-11

HEMP (in O. Eng. _henep_, cf. Dutch _hennep_, Ger. _Hanf_,
cognate with Gr. k'annabis [in Greek letters], Lat. cannabis),
an annual herb (_Cannabis sativa_) having angular rough stems and
alternate deeply lobed leaves. The bast fibres of _Cannabis_ are
the hemp of commerce, but, unfortunately, the products from many
totally different plants are often included under the general
name of hemp. In some cases the fibre is obtained from the stem,
while in others it comes from the leaf. Sunn hemp, Manila hemp,
Sisal hemp, and Phormium (New Zealand flax, which is neither flax
nor hemp) are treated separately. All these, however, are often
classed under the above general name, and so are the
following:---Deccan or Ambari hemp, _Hibiscus cannabinus_, an
Indian and East Indian malvaceous plant, the fibre from which is
often known as brown hemp or Bombay hemp; Pit'e hemp, which is
obtained from the American aloe, _Agave americana_; and Moorva or
bowstring-hemp, _Sansevieria zeylanica_, which is obtained from
an aloe-like plant, and is a native of India and Ceylon. Then
there are Canada hemp, _Apocynum cannabinum_, Kentucky hemp,
_Urtica cannabina_, and others.

The hemp plant, like the hop, which is of the same natural order,
Cannabinaceae, is dioecious, i.e. the male and female flowers are
borne on separate plants. The female plant grows to a greater
height than the male, and its foliage is darker and more
luxuriant, but the plant takes from five to six weeks longer to
ripen. When the male plants are ripe they are pulled, put up
into bundles, and steeped in a similar manner to flax, but the
female plants are allowed to remain until the seed is perfectly
ripe. They are then pulled, and after the seed has been removed
are retted in the ordinary way. The seed is also a value
product; the finest is kept for sowing, a large quantity is sold
for the food of cage birds, while the remainder is sent to the
oil mills to be crushed. The extracted oil is used in the
manufacture of soap, while the solid remains, known as oil-cake,
are valuable as a food for cattle. The leaves of hemp have five
to seven leaflets, the form of which is lanceolate-acuminate,
with a serrate margin. The loose panicles of male flowers, and
the short spikes of female flowers, arise from the axils of the
upper leaves. The height of the plant varies greatly with
season, soil and manuring; in some districts it varies from 3 to
8 ft., but in the Piedmont province it is not unusual to see them
from 8 to 16 ft. in height, whilst a variety (_Cannabis setiva_,
variety _gigantea_) has produced specimens over 17 ft. in height.

All cultivated hemp belongs to the same species, _Cannabis
sativa_; the special varieties such as _Cannabis indica_,
_Cannabis chinensis_, &c., owe their differences to climate and
soil, and they lose many of their peculiarities when cultivated
in temperate regions. Rumphius (in the 17th century) had noticed
these differences between Indian and European hemp.

Wild hemp still grows on the banks of the lower Ural, and the
Volga, near the Caspian Sea. It extends to Persia, the Altai
range and northern and western China. The authors of the
_Pharmacographia_ say:---``It is found in Kashmir and in the
Him'alaya, growing 10 to 12 ft. high, and thriving vigorously at
an elevation of 6000 to 10,000 ft.'' Wild hemp is, however, of
very little use as a fibre producer, although a drug is obtained
from it.

It would appear that the native country of the hemp plant is in
some part of temperate Asia, probably near the Caspian Sea. It
spread westward throughout Europe, and southward through the
Indian peninsula.

The names given to the plant and to its products in different
countries are of interest in connexion with the utilization of
the fibre and resin. In Sans. it is called _goni_, _sana_,
_shanapu_, _banga_ and _ganjika_; in Bengali, _ganga_; Pers.
_bang_ and _canna_; Arab. _kinnub_ or _cannub_; Gr. _kannabis_;
Lat. _cannabis_; Ital. _canappa_; Fr. _chanvre_; Span.
_c'a~namo_; Portuguese, _c'anamo_; Russ. _kon'opel_; Lettish
and Lithuanian, _kannapes_; Slav. _konopi_; Erse, _canaib_ and
_canab_, A. Sax. _hoenep_; Dutch, _hennep_; Ger. _Hanf_; Eng.
_hemp_; Danish and Norwegian, _hamp_; Icelandic, _hampr_; and in
Swed. _hampa_. The English word _canvas_ sufficiently reveals
its derivation from _cannabis_.

Very little hemp is now grown in the British Isles, although this
variety was considered to be of very good quality, and to possess
great strength. The chief continental hemp-producing countries
are Italy, Russia and France; it is also grown in several parts
of Canada and the United States and India. The Central
Provinces, Bengal and Bombay are the chief centres of hemp
cultivation in India, where the plant is of most use for
narcotics. The satisfactory growth of hemp demands a light rich
and fertile soil, but, unlike most substances, it may be reared
for a few years in succession. The time of sowing, the quantity
of seed per acre (about three bushels) and the method of
gathering and retting are very similar to those of flax; but, as
a rule, it is a hardier plant than flax, does not possess the
same pliability, is much coarser and more brittle, and does not
require the same amount of attention during the first few weeks
of its growth.

The very finest hemp, that grown in the province of Piedmont,
Italy, is, however, very similar to flax, and in many cases the
two fibres are mixed in the same material. The hemp fibre has
always been valuable for the rope industry, and it was at one
time very extensively used in the production of yarns for the
manufacture of sail cloth, sheeting, covers, bagging, sacking,
&c. Much of the finer quality is still made into cloth, but
almost all the coarser quality finds its way into ropes and
similar material.

A large quantity of hemp cloth is still made for the British
navy. The cloth, when finished, is cut up into lengths, made
into bags and tarred. They are then used as coal sacks. There
is also a quantity made into sacks which are intended to hold
very heavy material. Hemp yarns are also used in certain classes
of carpets, for special bags for use in cop dyeing and for
similar special purposes, but for the ordinary bagging and
sacking the employment of hemp yarns has been almost entirely
supplanted by yarns made from the jute fibre.

Hemp is grown for three products---(1) the fibre of its stem; (2)
the resinous secretion which is developed in hot countries upon
its leaves and flowering heads; (3) its oily seeds.

Hemp has been employed for its fibre from ancient times.
Herodotus (iv. 74) mentions the wild and cultivated hemp of
Scythia, and describes the hempen garments made by the Thracians
as equal to linen in fineness. Hesychius says the Thracian women
made sheets of hemp. Moschion (about 200 B.C.) records the use
of hempen ropes for rigging the ship ``Syracusia'' built for
Hiero II. The hemp plant has been cultivated in northern India
from a considerable antiquity, not only as a drug but for its
fibre. The Anglo-Saxons were well acquainted with the mode of
preparing hemp. Hempen cloth became common in central and
southern Europe in the 13th century.

_Hemp-resin._---Hemp as a drug or intoxicant [sic---the word
"intoxicant" implies "something which poisons", while it is well
known that hemp is not poisonous in any way] for smoking and
chewing occurs in the three forms of bhang, ganja, and charas.

1. _Bhang_, the Hindustani _siddhi_ or _sabzi_, consists of the
dried leaves and small stalks of the hemp; a few fruits occur in
it. It is of a dark brownish-green colour, and has a faint
peculiar odour and but a slight taste. It is smoked with or
without tobacco; or it is made into a sweetmeat with honey, sugar
and aromatic spices; or it is powdered and infused in cold water,
yielding a turbid drink, _subdschi_. _Hashish_ is one of the
Arabic names given to the Syrian and Turkish preparations of the
resinous hemp leaves. One of the commonest of these preparations
is made by heating the bhang with water and butter, the butter
becoming thus charged with the resinous and active substances of
the plant.

2. _Ganja_, the guaza [???] of the London brokers, consists of
the flowering and fruiting heads of the female plant. It is
brownish-green, and otherwise resembles bhang, as in odour and
taste. Some of the more esteemed kinds of hashish are prepared
from this ganja. Ganja is met with in the Indian bazaars in
dense bundles of 24 plants or heads apiece. The hashish in such
extensive use in Central Asia is often seen in the bazaars of
large cities in the form of cakes, 1 to 3 in. thick, 5 to 10
in. broad and 10 to 15 in. long.

3. _Charas_, or churrus, is the resin itself collected, as it
exudes naturally from the plant, in different ways. The best
sort is gathered by the hand like opium; sometimes the resinous
exudation of the plant is made to stick first of all to cloths,
or to the leather garments of men, or even to their skin, and is
then removed by scraping, and afterwards consolidated by
kneading, pressing and rolling. It contains about one-third or
one-fourth its weight of the resin. But the churrus prepared by
different methods and in different countries differs greatly in
appearance and purity. Sometimes it takes the form of egg-like
masses of greyish-brown colour, having when of high quality a
shining resinous fracture. Often it occurs in the form of
irregular friable lumps, like pieces of impure linseed oil-cake.

The medicinal and intoxicating [sic] properties of hemp have
probably been known in Oriental countries from a very early
period. An ancient Chinese herbal, part of which was written
about the 5th century B.C., while the remainder is of still
earlier date, notices the seed and flower-bearing kinds of hemp.
Other early writers refer to hemp as a remedy. The medicinal and
dietetic use of hemp spread through India, Persia and Arabia in
the early middle ages. The use of hemp (bhang) in India was
noticed by Garcia d'Orat in 1563. Berlu in his _Treasury of
Drugs_ (1690) describes it as of ``an infatuating quality and
pernicious use.'' Attention was recalled to this drug, in
consequence of Napoleon's Egyptian expedition, by de Sacy (1809)
and Rouger (1810). Its modern medicinal use is chiefly due to
trials by Dr O'Shaughnessy in Calcutta (1838--1842). The plant
is grown partly and often mainly for the sake of its resin in
Persia, northern India and Arabia, in many parts of Africa and in
Brazil.

_Pharmacology and Therapeutics._---The composition of this drug
is still extremely obscure; partly, perhaps, because it varies so
much in individual specimens. It appears to contain at least two
alkaloids---cannabinine and tetano-cannabine---of which the
former is volatile. The chief active principle may possibly be
neither of these, but the substance cannabinon [since then the
active substance has been discovered to be delta-9
tetrahydrocannabinol, although marijuana's effects may be further
helped by these other substances]. There are also resins, a
volatile oil and several other constituents. Cannabis
indica---as the drug is termed in the pharmacopoeias---may be
given as an extract (dose 1/4--1 gr.) or tincture (dose 5--15
minims).

The drug has no external action. The effects of its absorption,
whether it be swallowed or smoked, vary within wide limits in
different individuals and races [sic---in hindsight, the latter
seems Eurocentric and surely false]. So great is this variation
as to be inexplicable except on the view that the nature and
proportions of the active principles vary greatly in different
specimens. But typically the drug is an intoxicant [sic],
resembling alcohol in many features of its action, but differing
in others [how it resembles alcohol in "many features" I have yet
to discover smile ]. The early symptoms are highly pleasurable, and
it is for these, as in the case of other stimulants, that the
drug is so largely consumed in the East. There is a subjective
sensation of mental brilliance, but, as in other cases, this is
not borne out by the objective results. It has been suggested
that the incoordination of nervous action under the influence of
Indian hemp may be due to independent and non-concerted action of
the part of the two halves of the cerebrum. Following on a
decided lowering of the pain and touch senses, there comes a
sleep which is often accompanied by pleasant dreams. There
appears to be no evidence in the case of either the lower animals
or the human subject that the drug is an aphrodisiac. Excessive
indulgence in cannabis indica is very rare, but may lead to
general ill-health and occasionally to insanity [any recorded
cases of this actually happening?]. The apparent impossibility
of obtaining pure and trustworthy samples of the drug has led to
its entire abandonment in therapeutics. When a good sample is
obtained it is a safe and efficient hypnotic, at any rate in the
case of a European [sic---again, this is highly conjectural and
surely false]. The tincture should not be prescribed unless
precautions are taken to avoid the precipitation of the resin
which follows its dilution with water.

See Watt, _Dictionary of the Economic Products of India_.

Xanderviceory

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