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VI.10 - Diseases of Antiquity in South Asia

from Part VI - The History of Human Disease in Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Kenneth F. Kiple
Affiliation:
Bowling Green State University, Ohio
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Summary

South Asia, also known as the Indian subcontinent, extends from the Himalayas south to form a huge triangle that juts into the Indian Ocean with the Arabian Sea on one side and the Bay of Bengal on the other. India, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, and the small Himalayan countries of Nepal and Bhutan are included in this area. South Asia can be divided roughly into three parts, beginning with the triangle-shaped Deccan Plateau, moving north to the fertile plain along the Ganges and Indus rivers, and finally extending to the northernmost section at the foot of the Himalayas.

Background: The Ancient Indian Texts

The Ayurvedic Texts

Ancient Indian Medicine had close ties with philosophy and religion. The basic texts of Hinduism are the four Vedas: Rg, Sam, Yajur, and Atharva. Ayurveda, meaning the “science of life,” is considered to be the fifth of these texts and as important as the other four. All of the first four Vedas have sections that deal with healing and the prevention and cure of sickness. Yet the approach is usually magical or by prayer to the deities of the Vedic pantheon.

The Ayurvedic texts, by contrast, are of later origin and tend to attribute disease to divine causes less frequently. The codification of Ayurveda probably occurred around the sixth century B.C., and the texts presumably took their defined forms, in which they are still available, by the sixth or seventh century A.D. They were compiled in the northwestern part of India and in areas that today include Pakistan and Afghanistan, although, with the spread of the Aryans and their culture, Ayurveda came to be practiced over much of the country.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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References

Ackerknecht, Erwin H. 1982. A short history of medicine. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Bhisagratna, K. K., ed. 1963. Sushruta Samhita, 3 vols., 2d edition. Varanasi, India.Google Scholar
Cockburn, T. Aidan. 1971. Infectious diseases in ancient populations. Current Anthropology 12.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Filliozat, J. 1949. La Doctrine classique de la médicine indienne: Ses origines et ses paralleles grecs. Paris.Google Scholar
Leslie, Charles, ed. 1976. Asian medical systems: A comparative study. London.Google Scholar
Sastri, K., and Chaturvedi, G., eds. 1979. The Charaka Samhita, 7th edition. Varanasi, India.Google Scholar
Shastri, K. A., ed. 1972. Sushruta Samhita, 2 vols., 3d edition. Varanasi, India.Google Scholar

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