Ashtavaidya

An Ashtavaidya is a practitioner of the Ayurveda system of medicine belonging to a certain select group of families in the Indian state of Kerala. Among the Ayurvedic healers of Kerala, the Ashtavaidyas are the physicians who are masters of the eight branches of Ayurveda mentioned in classical texts. Practitioners were often Pushpaka Brahmins (including Moothedathu/Moosad), Ambalavasis or Ezhavas.

It was this expertise in the eight branches (ashtangas in sanskrit) that earned them the epithet of ashtavaidya. These branches are dealt with in detail in the treatise Ashtānga Hridayam one of the primary texts of Ayurveda. The eight branches of Ayurveda are Kaya (general medicine mainly dealing with digestive disorders), Bala (pediatrics including obstetrics), Graha (psychological disorders due to possession by evil spirits), Urdhvanga (diseases of the head (eyes, ears, nose, throat and teeth)), Shalya (surgery and treatment for external injuries), Damshtra (toxicology (treatment for poisoning, snake and insect bites), Jara (geriatrics and rejuvenation) and Vrisha (aphrodisiacs and treatment for sterility).[1][2][3]

Initially there were eighteen families that were designated as families of Ashtavaidyas. Many of these families became extinct or got merged with other families and currently there are only eight surviving families considered as families of ashtavaidyas. These families are Aalathiyoor Nambi, Elayidath Thaikkatt Mooss, Thrissur Thaikkattu Mooss (Pazhanellippurath Thaikkatt Mooss), Kuttancherry Mooss, Vayaskara Mooss, Chirattamon Mooss, Velluttu Mooss and Pulamanthol Mooss.[4] Only four of these eight families are practicing Ayurveda now. They are Thrissur Thaikkattu (Pazhanellippurathu Thaikkattu Moss), Elayidath Thaikkattu Moss, Chirattamann Moss and Pulamantol Moss.[5]

Contributions to literature on Ayurveda

The Ashtavaidyas have made several significant contributions to the literature on Ayurveda. These include commentaries on the Ashtangahrdayam and compendiums in Malayalam such as Alattur Manipravalam, Cikitsamanjari, Sahasrayogam and Sindhuramanjari. A member of the Vayaskara Mooss family has published ancient texts and his own original works. Vaidyamadham Cheriya Narayan Namboodiri (1932-2013) has written books and over a hundred newspaper articles to inform the public about Ayurveda.[1]

The training of Ashtavaidyas

In the pre-modern times the Ashtavaidyas were trained in the traditional Gurukula system. This involved a long period of intense study and apprenticeship under accomplished masters. Knowledge of Sanskrit was considered essential to understand and analyse the meanings in the ancient medical texts. Students also mastered Sanskrit works on Tarka (the rules of reasoning and argument), and the traditional philosophies of Nyaya, Vaisheshika and Samkhya. The Ayurvedic studies of Ashtavaidyas began with the study of Ashtangahrdayam; this involved memorizing all 7120 verses of the Ashtangahrdayam. During the period of apprenticeship under a guru, student physicians wrote out the prescription for patients. The number of years of education was said to be “five years of textual study, five years of learning about medicinal plants in the forest, and five years of apprenticeship at home”, in practice the period of study would be much longer.[1]

gollark: We could arbitrarily colorize users.
gollark: Anyway, *why* are there rainbows there? Where you experimenting with hashbow-style stuff? Because that might be cool.
gollark: I edited the file to remove the merge conflict annotations and just put in the right version instead.
gollark: Does anything *use* this?
gollark: Maybe we could even experiment with nongrays.

References

  1. Indudharan Menon, Annamma Spudich (October 2010). "The Ashtavaidya physicians of Kerala: A tradition in transition". Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine. 1 (4): 245–50. doi:10.4103/0975-9476.74424. PMC 3117315. PMID 21731370. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  2. V. T. Yadugiri (25 August 2010). "The Ashtavaidya medical tradition of Kerala" (PDF). Current Science. 99 (4). Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  3. P. U. Leela (January 2013). "Healers in the context of culture: The ashtavaidya tradition of Kerala, South India". Ancient Science of Life. 32 (S9): S9. doi:10.4103/0257-7941.123821. PMC 4147565.
  4. Dr. K. M. Namboodiri. "Ashtavaidyans". Namboothiri Website Trust. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  5. P. U. Leela (2008). Religious beliefs and medical practices: a sociological study of ashtavaidyas of Kerala. New Delhi: Jawaharlal Nehru University. Retrieved 10 November 2016. (thesis submitted to Jawaharlal Nehru University for the award of PhD degree).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.