5,000 Years of Cannabis
Cannabis is one of humanity's oldest cultivated plants. Archaeological evidence places its use back at least 5,000 years, with applications spanning medicine, spirituality, textiles, and recreation across every continent. Understanding cannabis history helps contextualize its current legal status and destigmatize its use. The plant's journey from revered medicine to prohibited substance to emerging legal commodity is one of the most dramatic stories in pharmacological history.
Ancient Origins
The earliest documented use of cannabis appears in the Chinese pharmacopoeia Pen Ts'ao Ching, attributed to Emperor Shen Nung around 2700 BCE. It was prescribed for pain, rheumatism, and malaria. In India, cannabis was sacred — the Atharva Veda (1500 BCE) names it one of five sacred plants. Ancient Egyptians used it for inflammation (documented in the Ebers Papyrus, 1550 BCE). In 2019, archaeologists discovered 2,500-year-old cannabis residue in wooden braziers at a burial site in the Pamir Mountains of Central Asia, published in Science Advances (Ren et al., 2019) — the earliest direct evidence of cannabis smoking for psychoactive purposes.
Source: Li, Economic Botany, 1974
Cannabis in America
Hemp was a major crop in colonial America — George Washington and Thomas Jefferson both grew it. The Declaration of Independence was drafted on hemp paper. Cannabis was widely available in pharmacies throughout the 1800s, listed in the U.S. Pharmacopeia from 1851 to 1942 as a treatment for pain, nausea, and inflammation. Tinctures from companies like Eli Lilly, Parke-Davis, and Squibb were standard medicine.
Prohibition
The Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, championed by Federal Bureau of Narcotics Commissioner Harry Anslinger, effectively criminalized cannabis at the federal level. Historians note the campaign was heavily racialized, targeting Mexican immigrants and Black jazz musicians. The Controlled Substances Act of 1970 classified cannabis as Schedule I — the most restrictive category, alongside heroin — defined as having "no accepted medical use" and "high potential for abuse." This classification persists federally today despite mounting scientific evidence to the contrary.
The Scientific Renaissance
Modern cannabis science began in 1964 when Dr. Raphael Mechoulam at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem isolated and synthesized THC, identifying it as the plant's primary psychoactive compound. In 1988, researchers at St. Louis University discovered CB1 receptors in the brain. In 1992, Mechoulam's team discovered anandamide — the first endocannabinoid — revealing that humans have a built-in system designed to interact with cannabinoid-like molecules. These discoveries fundamentally changed our understanding of cannabis from a recreational drug to a compound that interfaces with core human biology.
Legalization Wave
California became the first state to legalize medical cannabis in 1996 (Proposition 215). Colorado and Washington became the first states to legalize recreational use in 2012. As of 2024, 24 states plus Washington D.C. have legalized adult-use cannabis, and 38 states have medical programs. The 2018 Farm Bill legalized hemp (cannabis with ≤0.3% Delta-9 THC) federally, opening the door for legal THC-A flower, CBD products, and other hemp-derived cannabinoids to be sold nationwide.
Be Part of the Story
Cannabis is in the middle of a historic shift from prohibition to acceptance. Educate yourself, consume responsibly, and make informed choices.
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