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madox07

Lifer
Dec 12, 2016
1,823
1,690
Oh, you’re just blowing smoke up my ass,” is something you might hear someone say when they think you’re just telling them what they want to hear. But in 18th-century England, blowing smoke up one’s ass was an actual medical procedure, and no, we aren’t kidding.
According to Gizmodo, one of the earliest reports of such a practice took place in England in 1746, when a woman was left unconscious after nearly drowning.

Her husband allegedly took the suggestion of administering a tobacco enema to revive her, a practice that was rising in popularity at the time as a possible answer to the frequent, local instances of drowning.

Left with little choice, the man took a tobacco-filled pipe, inserted the stem into his wife’s rectum, and, well, blew a bunch of smoke up there. As strange as it may sound today, it reportedly worked, the hot embers of the tobacco leaf jolting the wife back into consciousness, and the practice grew quickly from there.
But where did the idea to use tobacco as a form of medicine come from? Indigenous Americans, who used the plant to treat various ailments, invented what we refer to as the tobacco enema. English Botanist, physician, and astrologer Nicholas Culpeper borrowed from these practices to treat pain in his native England with methods including enemas to treat inflammation as a result of colic or a hernia.
Years later, English physician Richard Mead would be among the earliest proponents of using the herbal enema as a recognized practice, and helped bring its use, however short-lived, into mainstream culture.

By the late 1700s, the method had become a regularly applied medical procedure, mostly used to revive people thought to be nearly deceased, usually drowning victims. The process was so common, in fact, that several major waterways kept the instrument, consisting of a bellows and flexible tube, nearby in case of such emergencies.

The tobacco smoke was believed to increase the heart rate of the victim and encourage respiratory functions, as well as “dry out” the insides of the waterlogged individual, making this method of delivery more preferred than breathing air directly into the lungs via the mouth.
Before the implementation of an official instrument, tobacco enemas were typically administered with a standard smoking pipe.

This proved to be an impractical solution as the stem of a pipe was much shorter than the tube of the instrument that would come later, making both the spread of diseases such as cholera, and the accidental inhalation of the contents of the patient’s anal cavity, an unfortunate yet common possibility.

With the tobacco enema’s rise in popularity in full swing, London doctors William Hawes and Thomas Cogan together formed The Institution For Affording Immediate Relief To Persons Apparently Dead From Drowning in 1774.

The group was later named the much simpler Royal Humane Society, a charitable organization that “grants awards for acts of bravery in the saving of human life and, also, for the restoration of life by resuscitation.” It is still in operation today and is now sponsored by the Queen of England.
The practice of awarding life-saving citizens has been a hallmark of the society since its inception. Back then, anyone known to revive a drowning victim was awarded four guineas, equal to around $160 today.

The procedure, of course, is no longer in use today. However, the tobacco enema had a good run during the 18th century, and its usage even spread to treat additional ailments such as typhoid, headache, and stomach cramping.

But with the 1811 discovery that tobacco is actually toxic to the cardiac system, however, the popularity of the practice dwindled quickly from there.
Edited by Cosmic: Please remember to capitalize the title.

 

didache

Can't Leave
Feb 11, 2017
480
10
London, England
The use of tobacco as medicine in Europe goes back even further than the 18th century. Jean Nicot was born in 1530 in France and served as the French ambassador in Portugal from 1559 to 1561. When he returned to France after his service in Lisbon he brought back tobacco plants which Portuguese sailors had obtained in the New World. Nicot then introduced snuff tobacco to the French royal court and, in particular, he treated the queen mother, Catherine de' Medici, with tobacco to cure her of her migraines. It was apparently quite effective. Nicot never knew what the active ingredient of tobacco was, but the word 'nicotine' comes from his name as he was the first European to exploit it as medicine.
Mike

 

mawnansmiff

Lifer
Oct 14, 2015
7,421
7,365
Sunny Cornwall, UK.
Tobacco has a long history of alleged medical uses. Below is an extract from a book I read about life in Elizabethan England.
"Tobacco was at first thought to be good for you. The Spanish pharmacologist Nicolas Monardes praised it as a cure for anything from bad breath to kidney stones. But smoker's wives must have noticed its negative effect on bad breath: 'it makes your breath stink like the piss of a fox' [Dekker: The Honest Whore act II scene I]. By 1577 it was being grown in England and by the 1590's a small pipeful could be bought in a playhouse for 3d.
At the playhouses and animal-baiting rings 'and everywhere else, the English are constantly smoking the Nicotan weed [Nicotiana] which in America is called Tobaca'. Once they had got their clay pipes to draw 'they draw the smoke into their mouths which they puff out again through their nostrils like smoke, along with it plenty of phlegm and defluxion from the head'. To 'drink' tobacco was to inhale.
A Swiss medical student writing in 1599 gives us this description:
'In the alehouses tobacco or a species of wound-wort [henbane?] are also obtainable...the powder is lit in a small pipe. The smoke is sucked into the mouth, and the saliva is allowed to run freely, after which a good draught of Spanish wine follows. This they regard as a curious [exceptional] medicine for defluctions, and as a pleasure, and the habit is so common with them that they always carry the instrument [pipe] on them and light up on all occasions, at the play, in the taverns or elsewhere, drinking as well as smoking together...and it makes them riotous and merry, and rather drowsy, just as if they were drunk, though the effect soon passes...and they use it so abundantly because of the pleasure it gives, that their preachers cry out on them for their self destruction and I am told the inside of one man's veins after death was found to be covered in soot just like a chimney'.
Regards,
Jay.

 

madox07

Lifer
Dec 12, 2016
1,823
1,690
Now ... I have read all sorts of accounts about pseudo medical uses for tobacco, habits, so on and so forth, but blowing smoke through one's arse, is ridiculous. It just shows us how little we knew about human anatomy during a certain part, or for the greater part of our history. Or perhaps knowledge of how our body works has increased exponentially in the past century.. :puffy:

 

jpmcwjr

Moderator
Staff member
May 12, 2015
24,724
27,320
Carmel Valley, CA
According to Gizmodo, one of the earliest reports of such a practice took place in England in 1746, when a woman was left unconscious after nearly drowning.

Her husband allegedly took the suggestion of administering a tobacco enema to revive her, a practice that was rising in popularity at the time as a possible answer to the frequent, local instances of drowning.

Left with little choice, the man took a tobacco-filled pipe, inserted the stem into his wife’s rectum, and, well, blew a bunch of smoke up there. As strange as it may sound today, it reportedly worked, the hot embers of the tobacco leaf jolting the wife back into consciousness, and the practice grew quickly from there.
I'd say that someone is figuratively blowing smoke up the ass....

 

saintpeter

Lifer
May 20, 2017
1,158
2,635
Thank you Maddox. I read it last night; had to make a pot of coffee and do a couple hours of research. Amazing. However nowhere could I find whether they preferred aro or English which started me thinking what if they had Captain Black Grape. A sleepless night I assure you.

 

kanaia

Part of the Furniture Now
Feb 3, 2013
660
551
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