Cannabis in China

Cannabis in China is illegal except for industrial purposes (hemp)[1] and some forms of medicine. Historically, cannabis has been used in China for fiber, seeds, as a traditional medicine, as well as for some ritual purposes within Taoism.

Cannabis by the roadside, Jiuquan, Gansu

Chinese etymology

(Mandarin pronunciation: [mǎ]), a Chinese word for cannabis, is represented by the Han character .[2][3][4] The term ma, used to describe medical marijuana by 2700 BCE, is the oldest recorded name for the hemp plant.[5]

The word ma has been used to describe the cannabis plant since before the invention of writing five-thousand years ago. Ma might share a common root with the Proto-Semitic word mrr, meaning "bitter." Evidence of the earliest human cultivation of cannabis was found in Taiwan.[6][7][8] Ancient Chinese prose and poems, including poetry in the Shi jing (Book of Odes), mention the word ma many times. An early song refers to young women weaving ma into clothing.[2][9][8]

The word ma is often paired with the Chinese word for "big" or "great" to form the compound word dama or 大麻 (dàmá). Dama is sometimes used to describe industrial hemp, as there is a negative connotation meaning "numbness" associated with the word ma by itself.[10][11] Historical Chinese medical texts (c. 200 CE) through contemporary twentieth century Chinese medical literature discuss individual terms for ma, including mafen (麻蕡), mahua (麻花), and mabo (麻勃), referring to specific parts of the male and female flowers of a cannabis plant with differing cannabinoid ratios.[12]

History

Cannabis has been confirmed to have originated in Northwest China before the Ancient Chinese domesticated the plant to India and other parts of Asia, particularly the Central Asian steppe in 10,000 BC.[13] In the 19th century, Xinjiang province was a major producer and exporter of hashish, with Yarkand being a major center.[14] Tens of thousands of kilograms annually were exported to British India, legally and under tariff, until 1934 when Chinese authorities cut off the legal trade, though smuggling continued for some years after.[15]

According to the Ministry of Public Security in 2015, cannabis use was on the rise among Chinese youth.

In 1985, the People's Republic of China joined the Convention on Psychotropic Substances and identified marijuana as a dangerous narcotic drug, and illegal to possess or use it. The penalty for marijuana possession in China is disputed from various sources, but according to the Law on Public Security Administration Punishments, marijuana smokers shall be detained for 10 to 15 days and fined a maximum of 2,000 yuan.[16][17] However, the cultivation of cannabis for industrial purposes (hemp) has never been prohibited in China.[1]

On another hand, cannabis seeds have been continuously listed in the Chinese Pharmacopeia[18] and hemp has never been prohibited in the history of the country.[19]

Cultivation

Cannabis plants are widely grown in Yunnan Province, especially around the city of Dali.[20] However, the Yunnan government began an eradication campaign in 1998 to make the province "cannabis free" by 2000, resulting in less wild and commercially grown cannabis. A similar campaign has also caused a rise in marijuana prices in Xinjiang.[21]

Taoism

Beginning around the 4th century, Taoist texts mentioned using cannabis in censers. Needham cited the (ca. 570 AD) Taoist encyclopedia Wushang Biyao 無上秘要 ("Supreme Secret Essentials") that cannabis was added into ritual incense-burners, and suggested the ancient Taoists experimented systematically with "hallucinogenic smokes".[22] The Yuanshi shangzhen zhongxian ji 元始上真眾仙記 ("Records of the Assemblies of the Perfected Immortals"), which is attributed to Ge Hong (283-343), says:

For those who begin practicing the Tao it is not necessary to go into the mountains. … Some with purifying incense and sprinkling and sweeping are also able to call down the Perfected Immortals. The followers of the Lady Wei and of Hsu are of this kind.[23]

Lady Wei Huacun 魏華存 (252-334) and Xu Mi 許謐 (303-376) founded the Taoist Shangqing School. The Shangqing scriptures were supposedly dictated to Yang Xi (330-c. 386) in nightly revelations from immortals, and Needham proposed Yang was "aided almost certainly by cannabis". The Mingyi bielu 名醫別錄 ("Supplementary Records of Famous Physicians"), written by the Taoist pharmacologist Tao Hongjing (456-536), who also wrote the first commentaries to the Shangqing canon, says, "Hemp-seeds (麻勃) are very little used in medicine, but the magician-technicians (shujia 術家) say that if one consumes them with ginseng it will give one preternatural knowledge of events in the future."[24][25] A 6th-century AD Taoist medical work, the Wuzangjing 五臟經 ("Five Viscera Classic") says, "If you wish to command demonic apparitions to present themselves you should constantly eat the inflorescences of the hemp plant."[26]

Joseph Needham connected myths about Magu, "the Hemp Damsel", with early Daoist religious usages of cannabis, pointing out that Magu was goddess of Shandong's sacred Mount Tai, where cannabis "was supposed to be gathered on the seventh day of the seventh month, a day of séance banquets in the Taoist communities."[27]

See also

References

  1. Wang, Qingbin; Shi, Guanming (1999). "Industrial Hemp: China's Experience and Global Implications". Review of Agricultural Economics. 21 (2): 344–357. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.868.9241.
  2. Jann Gumbiner Ph.D. (May 10, 2011), "History of Cannabis in Ancient China", Psychology Today
  3. Bretschneider 1895, p. 378.
  4. "character 1". Kangxi Dictionary. 1716. p. 1515.
  5. Hanson, Venturelli & Fleckenstein 2014, p. 408.
  6. Abel 1980.
  7. Barber, E.J.W. (1991). "The Development of Cloth in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages with Special Reference to the Aegean". Prehistoric Textiles. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00224-8.
  8. Alan Piper, "The Mysterious Origins of the Word 'Marijuana'", Sino-Platonic Papers, 153 (July 2005)
  9. Shurtleff, Huang & Aoyagi 2014, p. 45.
  10. Touw, Mia (1981). "The Religious and Medicinal Uses of Cannabis in China, India and Tibet" (PDF). Journal of Psychoactive Drugs. 13 (1): 23–34. doi:10.1080/02791072.1981.10471447. PMID 7024492. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
  11. Qian, Zhang (February 8, 2014). "Healing with hemp". Shanghai Daily.
  12. Brand, E. Joseph; Zhao, Zhongzhen (March 10, 2017). "Cannabis in Chinese Medicine: Are Some Traditional Indications Referenced in Ancient Literature Related to Cannabinoids?". Frontiers in Pharmacology. 8: 108. doi:10.3389/fphar.2017.00108. PMC 5345167. PMID 28344554.
  13. Metcalfe, Tom (2021-07-17). "Cannabis originated in China, genetic analysis reveals". Live Science.
  14. Journal of the Society of Arts. The Society. 1871. pp. 647–.
  15. S. Frederick Starr (4 March 2015). Xinjiang: China's Muslim Borderland: China's Muslim Borderland. Taylor & Francis. pp. 364–. ISBN 978-1-317-45136-5.
  16. "Public Security Administration Punishment Law of The People's Republic of China, Article 72".
  17. "Cannabis Use in China – Laws, History, Uses and More Info". Sensi Seeds. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
  18. Riboulet-Zemouli, Kenzi (2020). "'Cannabis' ontologies I: Conceptual issues with Cannabis and cannabinoids terminology". Drug Science, Policy and Law. 6: 205032452094579. doi:10.1177/2050324520945797. ISSN 2050-3245. S2CID 234435350.
  19. Wang, Q; Shi, G (1999). "Industrial Hemp: China's Experience and Global Implications". Review of Agricultural Economics. 21 (2): 344–357.
  20. Allen, Greg (May 1, 1999). "China High". Cannabis Culture.
  21. Labrousse, Alain; Laniel, Laurent (29 June 2013). The World Geopolitics of Drugs, 1999/1999. ISBN 9789401735056.
  22. Needham and Lu (1974), p. 150. From ancient Chinese fumigation techniques with "toxic smokes" for pests and "holy smokes" for demons, "what started as a 'smoking out' of undesirable things, changed now to a 'smoking in' of heavenly things into oneself."
  23. Needham and Lu (1974), p. 152.
  24. Needham and Lu (1974), p. 151.
  25. Rudgley, Richard (1998). The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Substances. Little, Brown and Company. Archived from the original on 2009-03-09. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  26. Joseph Needham, Ho Ping-Yu, and Lu Gwei-djen (1980). Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology; Part 4, Spagyrical Discovery and Invention. Cambridge University Press, p. 213.
  27. Needham, Joseph. 1974. Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology; Part 2, Spagyrical Discovery and Invention: Magisteries of Gold and Immortality. Cambridge University Press, p. 152

Sources

Further reading

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