A recent study suggests that Germanic warriors during the Roman era may have relied on carefully dosed stimulants to enhance their courage and physical endurance in battle. Researchers identified hundreds of small, spoon-like objects, often found alongside war equipment at archaeological sites across Scandinavia, Germany, and Poland, dating between the 1st and 4th centuries CE.
These objects, ranging from 1.5 to 2.7 inches in length and featuring either a concave bowl or a flat disk, were typically attached to warriors’ belts. While they played no role in securing the belts, their proximity to weapons has led scholars to conclude that they likely served as tools for dispensing stimulant substances. The objects were consistently found in graves or marshes, areas associated with battlefields and sacrifices, further supporting the hypothesis of their use in warfare.
https://archaeologymag.com/2024/12/barbarian-warriors-used-stimulants-during-roman-era/
This always made me wonder. Why don’t we hear more about these psychoactive substances in modern day drugs. I know the nightshade family is usually poisonous as well as psychoactive but surely people have experimented with extracting/filtering these plants to get the desired effect like we extract cocaine from coca leaves or opium from poppies.
Dunno about the US but these pants are all alive and well in Europe, it’s just that the experiences they provide tend to be petty extreme (in the case of datura/belladone for example), and/or too weak or impractical compared to the modern offerings. But yeah any psychonaut worth their salt would at least know about them if not tried some of them.
I looked up ephedrine, as far as I could tell the side effects were quite heavy compared to caffein or cocaine (though cocaine makes up for it by being very addictive).
erowid.org exists.