|
Ancient Greeks used amber for jewellery, as medicine and as a stone for spiritual healing.
Hippocrates (460-377 BC) describes various medicinal properties and applications which were used until the Middle Ages.
The Egyptians were known to use amber in powdered form to cure internal sicknesses.
In Roman times Calistratus wrote that amber protects from madness, and that powder of amber mixed
with honey cures throat, ear and eye diseases and taken with water cures stomach illnesses.
Possible healing effects of a sore throat and various other ailments if amber is put in water or wine for
1 to 14 days and the liquid is then drunk.
Pliny the Younger noted that Roman peasant women wore amber medallions not only as jewellery,
but also as a remedy for "swollen glands and sore throat and palate".
There was a belief in eastern countries that amber smoke strengthens the human spirit and gives courage.
In China "amber syrup" was used as a tranquilliser and antispasmodic.
In the Middle Ages amber beads were even worn for the treatment of jaundice.
It was believed that the magic force of this yellow stone could absorb unhealthy yellowness of the skin and
the weakness of the organism. Terms Oleum succini (amber oil), Balsamum succini (amber balsam),
Extractum succini (amber extract) were often used in the recipes and records of the alchemists of those times.
Prussian duke Albrecht decided to follow the recipe of a Roman physician and sent a piece of amber
to Luther as a remedy for stone disease.
As could be seen from legends and myths Prussians and Samogitians also used amber in the manufacture of incenses.
In former times Lithuanian tribes employed such incense to drive away evil spirits from the dead and help the soul travel
to good spirits.
The newly born babies were fumigated so that they could grow faster, the newly-weds - that they could live
happily and those going to war so that they could return with spoils of victory.
Before World War I amber was still used for treatment of various diseases,
e.g. tincture made of pieces of amber and vodka was thought to increase sexual potency of men.
In Lithuania and in tsarist Russia nannies had to wear amber beads to protect themselves and babies from diseases.
As late as before World War II, especially in Germany, amber beads were put on babies to make the eruption of teeth
less painful and make the teeth grow stronger.
Even now in Lithuania many women suffering from goitre purchase curative amber beads made of unpolished pieces
of amber to wear around the neck.
At least nobody would be able contradict the fact that amber beads collect an electrostatic charge
when touched and the oxidised surface contains the highest amount of succinic acid.
It is a biostimulant that has a positive effect on the nervous system, the heart, and the kidneys and stimulates recovery processes.
Nowadays amber is still used in homeopathic remedies and in chinese medicine.
|