Pharmacology and psychiatry at the origins Pharmacology and psychiatry at the origins of Greek medicine: The myth of Melampus and the madness of the Proetidesf Greek medicine: The myth of Melampus and the madness of the Proetides
Matteo F. Olivieri, Francesca Marzari, Andreas J. Kesel, Laura Bonalume, Francesco Saettini
Journal: Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
Year: 2016
Abstract
Melampus is a seer-healer of Greek myth attributed with having healed the young princesses of Argos of madness. Analysis of this legend and its sources sheds light on the early stages of the “medicalizing” shift in the history of ancient Greek medicine. Retrospective psychological diagnosis suggests that the descriptions of the youths’ madness rose from actual observation of behavioral and mental disorders. Melampus is credited with having healed them by administering hellebore. Pharmacological analysis of botanical specimens proves that Helleborus niger features actual neurological properties effective in the treatment of mental disorders. The discussion aims at examining the rational aspects of the treatment of mental conditions in Greco-Roman antiquity.
Keywords
Greek myth, Melampus, Proetides, hellebore, madness, pharmacology, retrospective psychological diagnosis