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Title: Developmental history of homoeopathy


1
WELCOME
2
Developmental history of homoeopathy
  • Dr Rita Chakraborty
  • Professor, In charge
  • Dept. of repertory

3
Homoeopathy originated from the Greek word
?µ????, hómoios, "similar" p????, pathos,
"suffering" or "disease") is a form of
alternative medicine first defined by Samuel
Hahnemann in the 18th century.
4
Founder Dr Christian Friedrich Samuel
Hahnemann in 18th Century
  • Based on the principles of Similia Similibus
    Curentur

5
A brief review of Hahnemann's life.
6
Life living
  • Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann, born on
    10th of April, of 1755 Meissen, Saxony, of
    Germany.
  • Meissen a small town on the bank of river Elbe,
    famous for its porcelain, Meissen
  • wine, and flourishing Cloth trade.

7
  • His father,uncles and grandfathers were all
  • painter and designer of porcelain.

8
Meissen in Hahnemann's time, where he lived from
1755 to 1775. Vue de Meissen du temps d'Hahnemann
9
  • Hahnemann was
    born in his parents
    house, which
    his
    father bought
    on 6th April 1753,
    for the sum of

    437 thalers.

10
Church near his house
11
Parents Siblings
  • Father, Christian Gottfried Hahnemann, painter.
  • Mother, Johanna Christiana, born Spiess.
  • They had 5 children and Hahnemann was the 3rd
    child of his parents.
  • He was admitted to the Town school on 20th July
    1767, at the age of 12 years.

12
School days -Meissen
  • When he was 5 years of age, his father had a
    habit of giving him thinking lessons. His
    fathers word-
  • I must go home now, I have to give a lesson
    to my son Samuel, a lesson in thinking that boy
    must learn to think.
  • His parents taught him to read and write.
  • Prove all things, hold fast that which is
    good, was the substance of his fathers advice

13
  • But his father was against his academic carrier
    due to financial problem.
  • His aptitude for study excited the admiration of
    his schoolmaster, with whom be became a favorite,
    and who undertook to direct his studies, and
    encouraged him to a higher order of study than
    that constituted the usual curriculum of a
    Grammar School.

14
  • This did not please his father, who several times
    removed him from the school and set him to some
    less intellectual work, but at length restored
    him to his favorite studies at the earnest
    request of his teacher, Master Muller, teacher in
    ancient language German composition, instructed
    the Samuel until his twentieth year without
    remuneration.
  • He spent several years in the public school , of
    Meissen, till his sixteenth year, then to the
    private school in the same place, and four years
    there after to attend the University of Leipsic.

15
  • On leaving school it was the custom to write an
    essay on some subject, and Hahnemann selected the
    somewhat unusual one.
  • The wonderful structure of the human hand
  • a theme which was so beautifully discoursed upon
    by his Sir Charles Bell, in his Bridgewater
    Treatise. Who would not like to wee how the boy
    Hahnemann treated this subject, his selection of
    which shown a strong bias towards natural
    science?

article
16

His SojournMeissen to Leipzig- Vienna
  • On Easter, 1775, with the sum of twenty thalers
    (this was the last money received from his
    father) and his fathers blessing he went to
    Leipzig for study of medicine.
  • His fondness for practicing medicine led him
    journeyed to Vienna, in order to witness the
    practice of medicine in the hospital Brothers of
    Charity of there, and had the good fortune to
    secure the friendship of Dr. Von Quarin,
  • (Princes family physician)

Dr. Von Quarin
17
He says ,
Life at Vienna
  • I had his friendship, and I might also say his
    love, and I was the only one of my age whom he
    took with him to visit his private patients. He
    respected, loved and instructed me as if I had
    been the first of his pupils, and even more than
    this, and he did all without expecting to receive
    any compensation from me.

18
At Vienna he did no translating but devoted
himself entirely to acquiring the principles of
medicine, and to his studies in the
hospital
19
  • During this time he had had for his support only
    68 florins 12 kreutzers and he was reluctantly
    compelled to tell his benefactor of his inability
    to continue his studies. Then Dr Quarin came to
    his aid and secured for him the position. That
    was the great opportunity in his life.

20
  • And It was the opportunity from Governor of

    Transylvania

    Dr Baron von
    Bruckenthal, as
  • family physician
    and custodian
    of
    his important library
    of
    Hermanstadt.

21
  • At the age of twenty he had mastered in 9
    languages e.g.
  • English, French, Italian, Greek and Latin,"
    and was making himself living as a translator
    and teacher of languages. He later gained
    proficiency in "Arabic, Syriac, Chaldaic and
    Hebrew, but he was able to speak in around 14
    languages.
  • He was consuming the midnight oil over his books,
    in a lamp which he had himself constructed out of
    clay.

22
  • In the spring of 1779 he
  • good-bye to his good friend,
  • the Baron,and departed for
  • the University of Erlangen.
  • He defended his thesis
    successfully, on the 10th
    of
  • August, 1779, receiving his
  • degree as
  • doctor of medicine.
  • The subject of this thesis was,
  • " A consideration of the Etiology and
  • Therapeutics of Spasmodic Affections."

University of Erlangen.
23
First years as a physician
  • He himself says
  • I went thither to begin my career as a practicing
    physician in the mining town of Hettstadt, in
    Mansfield county. Here it was impossible to,
    develop either inwardly or outwardly, and I left
    the place for Dessau in the spring of 1781, after
    a sojourn of nine months.
  • Here I found a better and more cultured
    society.

Dessau
24
As chemist
  • Chemistry occupied my leisure hours and short
    trips made to improve my knowledge of mining and
    smelting filled up the yet quite large dormer
    windows in my mind.
  • He became a regular visitor at the laboratory of
    the apothecary Haseler, where he was enabled to
    perfect himself in practical pharmacy and
    chemistry.

25
  • But at the end of this year he was appointed
    district physician in Gommern.
  • And here he met his future wife.
  • Gommern.

26
Life at Gomern 1781-1784
  • Marriage
  • "On 1st of December, 1782, Mr. Samuel Hahnemann,
    married to spinster Johanna Henrietta Leopoldina
    Kuchler,19 years old, only legitimate daughter of
    the late Godfried Henry Kuchler, and of his wife,
    Martha Sophia,
  • in St. john's Church here."

Johanna Henrietta Leopoldina Kuchler
27
  • Hahnemann translated from the French, the chemist
    Demachy's (first chemist)
    Art of
    Manufacturing Chemical Products.
  • In 1785 he published, at Leipzig, of Demachy's
  • Art of Manufacturing Chemical Products in
    two volumes

Demachy
28
Innocent delights
  • At the end of 1783 the eldest child, Henrietta,
    was born.
  • He was not only genius but also an affectionate
    father, who was composed a song for his baby,
  • Sleep daughter, gently ! The yellow bird
    chirps in the wood,
  • Lightly it jumps o'er the ice and the snow,
    And quietly sleeps on bare branches -
    so, Gently sleep.

29
Dissatisfaction in profession
  • During this time his practice was not large nor
    did he seem to make much effort to increase it,
    preferring to devote himself to his translations
    and studies. His position as parish doctor, with
    his translations, supported him and his
    increasing family.
  • But he was a sincere man was greatly dissatisfied
    with the vague and unsatisfactory medical
    knowledge of the day.

30
  • Hufeland
  • He also expressed his feelings
  • through a letter to Hufeland
  • "Letter to a Physician of High Standing on
    the Great Necessity of a Regeneration in
    Medicine.
  • He himself says
  • I could not conscientiously treat the unknown
    morbid conditions of my suffering brothers by
    these unknown medicines, which being very active
    substances, may (unless applied with the most
    rigorous exactness, which the physician cannot
    exercise, because their peculiar effects have not
    yet been examined) so easily occasion death, or
    produce new affections and chronic maladies,
    often more difficult to remove than the
    original disease.

31
  • To become, thus the murderer or the tormentor of
    my brother was to me an idea so frightful and
    overwhelming, that soon after my marriage, I
    renounced the practice of medicine, that I might
    no longer incur the risk of doing injury, and I
    engaged exclusively in chemistry, and in literary
    occupations.

32
Life at Dresden, 1788- 1789
  • Living two years and nine months at Gommern, he
    departed for Dresden in the fall of 1784. During
    this time he was not only busy with translation
    he started working on different medicinal
    substances.
  • In 1786, a masterly work on
  • Poisoning by Arsenic, Its Treatment and
    judicial Investigation."

Dresden
33
Life at leipzig 1789-1792
  • But the insatiable thirst for extended knowledge
    still impelled Hahnemann, and in the latter part
    of September, 1789, he removed to Leipsic "in
    order to be nearer to the fountain of science.

34
  • During that time had
  • become so dissatisfied
  • with medical methods
  • that he preferred to
  • devote all his time to
  • literary life, continuing
  • in the meantime his chemical
  • labors and investigations.
  • In this time he had discovered very many valuable
    facts in chemistry, had translated several
    scientific books into the German, and had
    given to the world a number of essays on
    important subjects.

35
Poverty (1790)Hahnemann at this time was poor
he had a growing family, and nothing to depend
upon.
  • "It was in the midst of poverty, in one little
    room which contained his whole family, in a
    corner, separated from the rest of them by a
    curtain, under every discouragement, and with a
    hungry family to maintain by hard drudgery, in
    the intervals of his own investigations, that he
    set himself to his task. Having resigned his
    practice as a medical man, he was compelled to
    earn a living by translating for the booksellers,
    and had, to enable him to continue his
    investigations, adopted the plan of sitting up
    the whole of every other night."

36
Important translations
  • Mercurial fever this book was written at
    Dresden, in 1788, and was published at Leipzig,
    in 1789.
  • In 1790 he published a translation from the
    English "Ryan on Diseases of the Lungs,
  • And the same year, from the Italian "Fabbroni
    on the Art of Making Wine on Rational
    Principles," adding, as was his custom, many
    notes.
  • 1791, he translated Grigg's " Advice to the
    Female Sex,

37
Original works
  • He, also, during this year, wrote original
    articles for Crell's Annalen on
  • " The Insolubility of Metals,"
  • " Best Means of Preventing Salivation
  • the Destructive Effects of Mercury
  • " Chemico-Pharmaceutical Materia Medica,"
    also mentions the Cortex Peruvianis etc.

38
The best translation in his life1790
  • The translation of a very important book, from
    which must be dated the discovery of the Law of
    the Similars Cullen's " Materia Medica."

39
  • Dr. Cullen was an authority on the subject of the
    Materia Medica of his day, an experienced
    lecturer, a talented chemist, and a brilliant and
    popular teacher in Edinburgh.
  • Cullen published the first edition of this book,
    in London, in 1773.Another edition was issued in
    1789 in two volumes, and it was this edition that
    Hahnemann used in translation.
  • (Cullen died in 1790).

Dr. Cullen
40
  • In this book, Volume II, Cullen devotes about
    twenty pages to Cortex Peruvianis (Peruvian
    Bark), giving its therapeutical uses in the
    treatment of intermittent and remit tent fevers,
    advises its use to prevent the chill, and gives
    minute directions for the safest period of the
    disease in which
  • to use it.
  • Hahnemann was impressed with the use of this
    drug, with which he as a physician had before
    been familiar.

41
Life as vagabond starts
He was driven from one place to other in Germany
42
  • In 1792 he went to Georgenthal, in the
    Principality of Gotha, to take charge of an
    asylum for the insane.
  • Same year Hahnemann published an article the
    first part of the Friend to Health.
  • 1793, the middle of May,he left Gorgenthal going
    from there to Molschleben, a small village near
    Gotha.
  • "While living in the village of Molschleben, he
    cured many cases of milk crust,with the help of
    dry Hepar sulphuris powder and warm water.
  • 1794 he went first to Pyrmont, a little
    watering-place in Westphalia, and thereafter to
    Brunswick

43
  • Konigslutter -- 1795 -1799
  • In Konigslutter, he wrote the second
  • part of the Friend to Health.
  • 1796 the discovery was to light in his essay
    titled
  • Essay on a New Principle for Ascertaining the
    Curative Powers of Drugs.
  • 1796 He put forward his new doctrine, Similia
    Similibus Curantur, (like cures like).

44
  • In 1797 he used Verat-alb for colic
  • and Nux vom for asthma.
  • The summer of 1799, in Konigslutter, an
    epidemic of scarlet fever occurred, during which
    Hahnemann discovered the great value of
    Belladonna as a prophylactic against this serious
    disease. Best work in his life but
  • Had to face lots of problems.

45
  • Enmity of Konigslutter physicians
  • "And the physicians of Konigslutter incited the
    apothecaries to bring an action against him. for
    interfering with them in dispensing his own
    medicines. He appealed to the letter of the law
    regulating the business of the apothecary, and
    argued that they had the sole privilege of
    compounding medicines, but that any man,
    especially any medical man, had a right to either
    give or sell uncompounded drugs, which were the
    only things he employed, and which he also
    administered gratuitously.
  • But it was in vain, and Hahnemann, a past master
    of pharmaceutical art, was forbidden to dispense
    his simple medicines." (Dudgeon's Biography,
    1852.)

46
Departure from Konigslutter to Hamburg
  • Due to enmity with Konigslutter physicians, in
    the autumn of 1799, with his family, he departed
    from this ungrateful city to Hamburg
  • Dudgeon says (Biography of Hahnemann, 1852) "He
    purchased a large carriage, in which he packed
    all his property and family, and with a heavy
    heart bade adieu to Konigslutter, where fortune
    had at length begun to smile upon him, and where
    he found leisure and opportunity to prosecute his
    interesting discoveries.
  • Many of the inhabitants, whose health he had been
    instrumental in restoring, or whose lives he had
    even saved by the discoveries of his genius
    during that fatal epidemic of scarlet fever.
  • And thus he journeyed on with all his earthly
    possessions, and with all his family beside him.

47
A dreadful accident in his life
  • A dreadful accident befell the melancholy
    cortege. Descending a precipitous part of the
    road the wagon was overturned, the driver thrown
    from his seat, his infant son so injured that he
    died shortly afterwards, and the leg of one of
    his daughters was fractured.
  • He himself was considerably bruised, and his
    property much damaged by falling into a stream
    that ran at the bottom of the road. With the
    assistance of some peasants they were conveyed to
    the nearest village (Muhlhausen), where he was
    forced to remain upwards of six weeks on his
    daughters account, at an expense that greatly
    lightened his not very well filled purse."
  • It would seem that after the accident Hahnemann
    settled first in Altona, as he dates a letter
    from that place on November 9th, 1799, while the
    letters dated from Hamburg occur in the year
    1800.

48
  • Hamburg.
  • In 1801 he published in Hufelands journal some
    observations on Browns Elements of Medicine
  • 1802, when he went to the little town of Mollen,
    from Hamburg.
  • From thence he went to Machern, a small village
    about four leagues from Leipzig. He was very poor
    during this period of his life.

Hufeland
49
  • From Machern Hahnemann went to Wittenberg,
    departing soon after for Dessau.
  • "Coffee and Its Effects," published in Leipsic,
    1803..
  • He was settled at Torgau in June,1805.
  • He remained at Torgau until 1811, then he went to
    Leipsic

50
Life at Torgau
  • "Medicine of Experience," 1805 .
  • 1805. First collection of provings
  • "Fragmenta de viribus medicamentorum, positivis
    sive in sano corpore humano observatis,"
  • Part 1. contains the symptoms arranged carefully.
    Part 2 is the Index, or Repertory. He gives the
    symptoms produced by drugs on the healthy.

51
  • The remedies given are 27 drugs
  • Aconitum napellus Acris tinctura (Hahnemann's
    Causticum) Arnica montana Atropa belladonna
    Laurus camphora Lytta vesicatoria (Cantharis)
    Capsicum annuum Chamomilla matricaria
    Cinchona officinalis et regia Cocculus
    menispermum Copaifera balsamum Cuprum
    vitriolatum, Digitalis purpurea Drosera
    rotundifolia Hyoscyamus niger Ignatia amara
    Ipecacuanha Ledum palustre Helleborus niger
    Daphne mezereum Strychnos nux vomica I.
    Papaver somniferum (Opium) Anemone pratensis
    (Pulsatilla) Rheum Datura Stramonium
    Valeriana officinalis Veratrum album.
  • 1805 he published an important pamphlet called "
    Aesculapius in the Balance.
  • "Von Hallers Materia Medica," translated in
    1806, this was the last of Hahnemanns
    translations.

52
  • During his residence at Torgau that Hahnemann
    gave to the world his great book.
  • Organon der Rationellen Heilkunde," or "Organon
    of Rational Healing.
  • It was published in Dresden, by Arnold, in 1810.

1811, when Hahnemann gave to the world the
first volume of the Materia Medica Pura or
"Reine Arzneimittellehre and move to Leipzig.
53
  • Leipzig -1812 to 1821,
  • On the 26th of June, 1812, Hahnemann presented a
    Latin thesis, entitled, A Medical Historical
    Dissertation on the Helleborism of the Ancients."
  • He decided to open here in Leipzig, at the
    beginning of April, an Institute for Graduate
    Physicians.
  • Along with Hahnemann
  • Dr. Hartmann was also
  • teaching to the old
  • and young
  • physician.

54
Life at kothen
1821moves to Kothen
  • The house in Köthen, being nowadays the Museum of
    Hahnemann, where he lived from 1821 to 1835, when
    he moved to Paris after got married with Mélanie.

55
  • His last great work Chronic diseases their
    peculiar nature and their Homoeopathic cure,
    published in Dresden in 1828.
  • 10th August, 1829, a large concourse of his
    disciples and admirers assembled at Coethen, for
    the purpose of celebrating the fiftieth
    anniversary of his reception of the Doctors
    degree,

56
  • The same day Hahnemann solemnly found the first
    Homeopathic Society., under the name of the
    "Central Society of German Homoeopathists," .
  • 1830, He denies Vis Medica Matrix Nature.
  • Great success in homoeopathic treatment by
    treating Dr Julias agedi
  • In 1830 Hahnemann lost his wife, the mother of
    his numerous family, and the sharer of all the
    vicissitudes of his eventful life.

57
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58
Life at Paris
  • In 1835 Mille Melanie, 35 years old, d Hervilly
    came to Coethen, succeeded in captivating
    Hahnemann, them in his eightieth year.
  • By the charms of her youth and beauty, and
    carried him off in triumph to Paris in the same
    year.
  • The life in Paris was very happy and smooth

59
  • 1836 was memorable by reason of presentation by
    the French homoeopathic Physicians of a medal to
    Hahnemann.
  • Hahnemann survived his migration to Paris eight
    years and died there full of honour, at the age
    of eighty nine, on the 2nd July, 1843.

60
HIS MAJOR CONTRIBUTION
61
  • Cure and prevention of scarlet fever, 1801.
  • Medicine of Experience, 1805.
  • Organon of Medicine, and its different edition,
  • 1810-1842
  • Materia Medica Pura, and its different
    edition, 1811-1833.
  • Chronic diseases, 1828-1838.

62
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63
The fundamental principles
  • Law of Similia
  • Law of Simplex
  • Law of Minimum Dose
  • Doctrine of Drug Proving
  • Theory of Chonic Disease
  • Theory of Vital Force
  • Doctrine of Drug Dynamization

64
Passing on the Baton
  • After the demise of Hahnemann, the spark that he
    left, took the form of a volcano and Homoeopathy
    spread far and near across the globe with the
    help of his disciples.

65
Disciples
Stapf consulted Hahnemann about his own child.
66
  • Hahnemanns students

67
Dr Adam met Hahnemann In 1823 soon after
Introduced homoeopathy In Russia.
Dr F. F. Quin visited him In 1821 1827 carried
Homoeopathy in England
68
Dr. Samuel Lilianthal, published in the
California Homoeopath, for March, April, May and
June, 1889, under the title " A Catechism of
Samuel Hahnemann's Organon,"
69
Arrival of Homoeopathy in India
  • Thus in India, the baton was passed on and
    Homoeopathy was accepted through the untiring
    efforts of some aspiring individuals.
  • Homoeopathy came India as early as
  • in 1810 by some German physicians
  • and missionaries in the state
  • of West Bengal.

70
Arrival of HomoeopathyIn India
71
  • 1815 -John Martin Honingberger was the first
    person who recognized to have brought
    homoeopathy and the name of Hahnemann to India.
    His 1st patient was adopted son of General Allard
    at Lahore. He treated cured many soldiers who
    had been bitten by a mad jackal. He met Hahnemann
    in 1835.
  • At this juncture there are a number of well known
    enthusiasts like Samuel Brooking, Dr. Cooper and
    Dr. J. Ruther, Mr. H. Ryper, Capt. May,
    C.J.Tonnere etc

72
  • Late Babu Rajendra Lal Datta, a layman truly laid
    the foundation of homoeopathy and started
    practice with astonishing results.
  • He was able to convert his opponents like Dr.
    Mahendra Lal Sirkar.

73
  • 1880, Homoeopathic Poor Dispensary
  • started by Fr. Muller in Mangalore.
  • 1885, Foundation of Calcutta
    Homoeopathic Medical College.
  • 1944, All India institute of homoeopathy
  • in Delhi
  • Homoeopathic enquiry committee
  • 1962,Homoeopathic pharmacopoeia committee
  • 1963 homoeopathic system of medicine, West bengal
  • In 1973, homoeopathy was recognized by the
    Central Govt. of India.

74
  • In 1978, Central Council for Research in
    Homoeopathy was established.
  • In 1983, a uniform education in homoeopathy at
    diploma and graduation level was enforced.
  • Homoeopathy continued to spread among all the
    states and also most importantly in the well
    known cities in India.

75
HOMOEOPATHY
  • SOUTH KANARA

76
Father Augustus Muller S J
  • In the golden pages of the history of mankind,
    Fr. Mullers name shines bright, inspiring men of
    goodwill to works of charity. Fr. Muller landed
    in Mangalore, India on 31st Dec. 1878.

77
Father Augustus Muller S J
  • He brought with him a small chest of homoeopathic
    medicine from Catellan, a homoeopathic firm in
    Paris, which he effectively used to treat
    students, their relatives and common people.

78
In the Year 1880, he started a regular dispensary
offering free medicines and consultation at
kankanady hills, which was known as Homoeopathic
Poor Dispensary
79
Father Augustus Muller S J
80
  • Fr. Muller did not stop with the dispensary but
    continued ahead with the establishment of Saint
    Josephs Leprosy
    Hospital Asylam in 1890
  • In 1895, Fr. Muller started
    General Hospital
    which will be
    always remember as a memorable
    contribution
  • The Govt. of India recognised the humanitarian
    work rendered by Fr. Muller and awarded him
    Kaiser-e-Hind in 1907.

81
Father Augustus Muller S J
  • The homoeopathic dispensary started by Fr.
    Muller in 1880 has now taken the form of a mighty
    institution offering under graduate and post
    graduate medical education, training and research.

82
Father Augustus Muller S J
  • His attempts were not futile but served as a
    source of inspiration for young, vibrant, dynamic
    homoeopaths in the south kanara district of
    Karnataka.
  • After Fr. Muller homoeopaths of south kanara
    district felt an urgent need to organize and
    unite all homoeopaths to popularise and promote
    homoeopathy among the common man.

83
Objectives
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85
Objectives
  • Study Homoeopathy
  • Learn Homoeopathy
  • Practice Homoeopathy
  • Be a true homoeopath
  • Live as a homoeopath
  • Die as homoeopath

86
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87
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