Electuary: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 17:23, 18 March 2025

Type of medicine


An electuary is a medicine consisting of a powder or other ingredient mixed with something sweet such as honey to make it more palatable.<ref name=sher>"The Doctor and the Buccaneer: Sir Hans Sloane's Case History of Sir Henry Morgan, Jamaica, 1688" by Richard B. Sheridan, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Vol. 41, No. 1 (January 1986), pp. 76-87.</ref>

In German and Swiss cultures, electuary (German: Latwerge

or 

Latwerg

) is also more generally a thickened juice and honey preparation with a thick, viscous consistency that is used in for culinary purposes, such as a (bread) spread or as a sauce ingredient.<ref>Latwerge kocherei eberle.ch [dead link]</ref><ref>

Latwerge(link). wiktionary.org.

7 February 2022.



</ref>

In the Indian Ayurveda tradition, electuaries are call lehya<ref>

Lehyam: Herbal Elixirs from Ayurveda | Kerala Ayurveda India(link). {{{website}}}.




</ref> (literally, "lickable").

Types

There are many different types of electuary: laxative electuary, joyful electuary etc. The fermentation of mixed herbs in honey and their effects on each other, increases medical properties already present and creates new ones.<ref>The Canon of Medicine/vol.5</ref>

Famous electuary in medicine

References

  1. Avicenna (1999). The Canon of Medicine (al-Qānūn fī'l-ṭibb), vol. 5. translate by Abdurrahman Sharafkandi.



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