Tobacco Industry
History of Tobacco
Ancient Times
Fifteenth Century
Sixteenth Century
Seventeenth Century
Eighteenth Century
Nineteenth Century
Twentieth Century
Modern Times
Corporate Stakeholders
Ethics & Social Values
Ecology & Natural Resources
Saint Leo Core Values
Throughout its long and storied history, tobacco has served the various appetites of religious shamans, aristocratic noblemen, common sailors, money changers and modern-day captains of industry. The aeromatic plant grew naturally in the moderate climates of the Americas and was transported to every corner of the world by seagoing merchants. Tobacco evolved from a miracle cure-all to a current medical pariah. From the days of King Philip III of Spain to present days, the tobacco industry has been controlled by a small number of governments and private companies. It wasn't until the nineteenth century that scientists began to understand the destructive nature of nicotine, about the same time that the automated cigarette rolling machine was invented, dramatically expanding the market. Modern evidence supports the conclusion that tobacco is a toxic product to produce and to consume. All aspects of the tobacco industry are contrary to the Core Values of Saint Leo University.
Tobacco Industry
History of Tobacco
Ancient Times
There is no indication of regular human tobacco use in the ancient world, except in the Americas. Evidence found in caves and excavations suggests that tobacco was cultivated in Central and South America as early as 6,000 BCE. Native Indians began using tobacco for religious and medicinal purposes about 1 BCE. Tobacco was seen by these early inhabitants as a miracle drug. They used it as an antiseptic to clean wounds, as an analgesic to relieve the pain of toothache and, some have said, even as a hallucinogenic enema. (Borio, 2011)
Between 470 and 630 CE, the Mayan tribes from Mexico, chased out by the dominant Aztec Empire, began moving north into what is now the United States. The Aztecs inherited the smoking of tobacco from the Mayans divided along economic and social castes. Members of the Court of Montezuma smoked ceremonial pipes filled with cut tobacco mixed with the resin from trees. The common Indians rolled tobacco leaves together and smoked crude cigars. The Mayans who settled in North America extended their practice with tobacco to the native tribes. The North Americans Indians adapted tobacco smoking as a key ingredient in their religion, believing that the Great Sprit could be seen in the rising smoke. (Borio, 2011)
Fifteenth Century
On a bright morning in October 1492, Columbus' three ships arrived in the New World for the first time, landing on the beach of an island in the Caribbean. The indigenous Indians, being either genuinely friendly or perhaps thinking the strange visitors were gods, offered them gifts. Columbus was puzzled in his journal that day about the gifts of fruit and dried leaves. Not wanting to appear ungrateful, Columbus accepted the gifts and his men brought them back to the ship. The record shows that they ate the fruits and threw away the bitter dried leaves. Robert Pane, a monk who accompanied Columbus on his second voyage in 1493, wrote lengthy descriptions about the native habit of inhaling snuff through the nose. He also described how the Indians burned the tobacco and inhaled the smoke through a tube. Pane is generally given the credit for being the first man to introduce the use of tobacco to Europeans. (Borio, 2011)
Sixteenth Century
During the first half of the sixteenth century, the Spanish and Portuguese sailors extended the use of tobacco along their trading routes, even as far as Japan. Trading ships making regular stops at the only open ports in Japan at the time, Kagoshima and Nagasaki, introduced tobacco to the Japanese they met. It spread through the country over the next few decades, often by Buddhist monks who used tobacco seeds to pay for lodging in the inns they occupied as they moved from place to place along the Tokaido highway from Osaka to Tokyo. (Borio, 2011)
During the second half of the sixteenth century, the supposed healing properties of tobacco dramatically increased its use in most European countries. A Spanish doctor wrote a book about the study of certain medicinal plants of the new world. In this book, he asserted that tobacco could cure 36 health issues including colic, hysteria, hernia, dysentery, toothache, falling fingernails, worms, halitosis, lockjaw and cancer. (BU Medical Center, 2011)
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