著者
稲葉 隆政
出版者
慶應義塾大学
雑誌
史学 (ISSN:03869334)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.56, no.4, pp.539-550, 1987-02

資料紹介一 序文二 訳文Several years ago, Dr. Yoshiyasu Uno, a professor of social psychology at Keio University, brought back from Cairo a copy of the Arabic text "Kitab Shanaq fi al-sumum wa al-tiryaq", based on "MS , tibb 60, Dar al-kutub al-misrlya". Presented here is a Japanese translation of the Arabic text, made at his request. This work on poisons and theriacs or antidotes has its origin in India The work is entitled "The Book of Shanaq", Shanaq, or Chanakya, was the prime minister of the Maurya Emperor Chandragupta, but the real author is unknown. It appears that the text was introduced into the Islamic world during the reign of the Caliph al-Rashid (786-809) It is known to have been translated into Persian from an Indian language by an Indian physician named Mankah, then into Arabic from Persian by Abu hatim for Yahya b khalid b barmak (d 805), and again into Arabic by al-'Abbas b sa'id al-jawhari for the Caliph al-Ma'mun (813-833). It is said that this work is one of the three most important works on poisons in Arabic, the others being by Jabir b hayyan and Ibn wahshiya. This work can be roughly divided into seven parts by subject These are as follows (1) Admonitions to rulers. (2) The symptoms of poisoned foods, drinks, clothes, perfumes, ointments, and others, and their effects on the body and organs. (3) The recipes for twelve sorts of poisons put in foods and drinks (4) The recipe for a universal antidote called Kandahasti, and its effects. (5) The recipes for narcotics, soporifics, and other injurious drugs, and their effects (6) The effects of the twelve poisons, mentioned in the third part, on the body and organs, and the recipes for antidotes to them. (7) The recipes for ten sorts of poisons put in clothes, perfumes, ointments, and others, and the recipes for antidotes to themv

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