We know that our ancestors, even our most ancient ancestors, drank wine all the time. While more expensive than water, wine was still affordable to the masses, while the more potent drugs were reserved for the rich and for special occasions, as well as medicinal use. A 2,700-year-old altar found in the Negev desert still shows traces of marijuana, showing us that the Israelites burned it during worship services. In Scythia, the Carpathian mountains, and western China, marijuana was burned at funerals, presumably to ease the mourners' pain. Greeks ate marijuana for the fun of it.
Opium was a more serious, and more expensive drug, used in Egypt to keep children quiet, to alleviate pain, and for a "bit of extra fun." Early physicians documented how to use opium as to reduce the danger of overdose, but Romans saw it as a painless method of suicide in addition to its medicinal uses. Opium may have been the most popular hard drug, but the ancient world also knew of and used hallucinogenic drugs derived from various plants. Read about the widespread use of drugs in the ancient world at Haaretz. -via Strange Company
(Image credit: Radio Tonreg)