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INTRODUCTION.


Sushruta and Hippocrates:—From the very apparent similarity which exists between the contents of this Samhita and the aphorisms of Hippocrates, many western scholars are apt to conclude too hastily that the ancient Indians drew their inspiration in the healing art from the medical works of the Greeks. But the reverse may be said of the Greeks as well with the greater confidence because such an assertion is supported by historic facts, and confirmed by the researches of the scholars of the west (1)[1]. According to all accounts Pythagoras was the founder of the healing art amongst the Greeks and the Hellenic peoples in general (2)[2]. This great philosopher imbibed his mysteries and metaphysics from the Brahmanas of India. Mr. Pocock in his India in Greece identifies him with Buddhagurus or Buddha, and it is but an easy inference to suppose that he carried many recipes and aphorisms of his master's Ayurveda with him. The sacred bean of Pythagoras is thought to have been the (3)[3] Indian Nelumbium (Utpalam). We know that simultaneously with the birth of Buddhism, Buddhist Sramanas were sent out to Greece, Asia minor. Egypt and ether distant countries to preach their new religion. They were known to the Greeks and there is good reason to believe that the Greek Simnoi (venerable) were no other than the Buddhist Sramanas (4)[4]. Now a missionary usually teaches the sciences of his country in addition to the preaching of his gospel. The distant mission stations or monasteries of Buddhism were

  1. (1) There is no ground whatever to suppose that Sushruta borrowed his system of medicine from the Greeks. On the contrary, there is much to tell against such an idea— Weber's History of Indian Literature.
  2. (2) The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art — Bedroe P. 162.
  3. (3) Pratt's Flowering Plants. Vol. I P. 57.
  4. (4) These Simoi (venerable) whom Clemeni of Alexandria has narrated to have rendered worship to a pjTamid originally dedicated to the relics of a god, were the Buddhist Arhals (venerables) Sramanas. Lalita-Vistaram— Raja Rajendra Lala Milter's Edition. Ch. I.