Diamoschu Dulce
Sweet Powder of Musk

Tradition:

Western, Unani

Source / Author:

Mesue

Herb Name

Latin

Amount

Saffron

Crocus sativus

Doronicum

Doronicum hookeri

Zedoary

Curcuma zedoaria

Aloeswood

Aquillaria agallocha

Mace

Myristica fragrans

2 drams ea.

Pearl

Margarita

Silk toasted

Sericum

White Amber

Succinum

Red Coral prepared

Corallum rubrum

Gallia Moschata

a compound

Basil

Ocinum basilicum

2 1⁄2 drams ea.

Red Behen

Salvia hemotodes

White Behen

Centaurea behen

Indian leaf

Cinnamonum tamala

Indian Spikenard

Nardostachys jatamansi

Clove

Eugenia caryophyllus

2 drams ea.

Ginger

Zingiber officinalis

Cubeb

Piper cubeba

Long Pepper

Piper longum

1 1⁄2 drams ea.

Musk

Moschus

2 scruples

Preparation:

Powder them, adding the Musk last. It may be made into an Electuary with clarified Honey (triple its weight) which was recommended by Mesue (author of the formula), or made into Troches.

Function:

Warms, Benefits the Brain and Nerves, Settles Wind

Use:

1. Melancholy
2. Depression (“Sadness without a cause”)
3. Vertigo

4. Dizziness
5. Epilepsy
6. Convulsions

7. Paralysis or loss of Nerve Function
8. Palpitations
9. Arrhythmia
10. Difficult or Labored Breathing; Breathlessness
11. Suffocative Catarrh

12. Increase Sperm in Cold bodies

Dose:

1–2 scruples; 1–2 drams of the Electuary, usually taken with wine or Basil water.

Cautions:

None noted

Modifications:

1. A later reformed version used Galangal instead of Doronicum, and added Nutmeg and Cinnamon instead of Red and White Behen, Spikenard and Indian Leaf.
2. For Vertigo, add 4 grains of Frankincense to 1 scruple of Diamoschu Dulce (Salmon)

Similar Formulas:

Diambra (Powder of Ambergris)


“Sweet Diamoschum, consisting of many Cordials, exhilarates the noble parts, especially the Heart and Vital Faculties, made languid or imbecile from any, but mainly a hot cause: It conduces also to many affections of the Uterus.,” (A Medicinal Dispensatory, Renou, 1657)


“Wonderfully helps cold affections of the Brain, that come without a Fever, Melancholy and its attendants, viz. Sadness without a cause, Vertigo or Dizziness in the head, Falling Sickness, Palsies, resolution of the Nerves, Convulsions, Heart-qualms, afflictions of the Lungs, and difficulty of Breathing”. (Culpeper)

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