Origin & Discovery
First Documented
Atharva Veda (~1500 BCE) as a sacred plant; first dedicated medical treatment in Ananda Kanda (~10th-12th century CE)
Mythologically referenced as one of the five sacred plants offered to Lord Shiva, who is said to have rested under cannabis leaves and drunk Bhang to cool his throat after consuming the Halahala poison during Samudra Manthan. The Atharva Veda (~1500 BCE) lists Bhanga among five sacred plants that "release us from anxiety". Despite this ancient ritualistic context, classical Ayurvedic texts treat Vijaya with strict medicinal seriousness — always shodhita (purified) before use, always paired with corrective herbs, never as a recreational or daily tonic.
Historical Timeline
~1500 BCE
Atharva Veda mentions Bhanga among five sacred plants for relief from anxiety
~600 BCE
NOT mentioned in Charaka or Sushruta Samhita — Vijaya is a post-classical addition to Ayurveda
~10th century CE
Ananda Kanda provides the first detailed Ayurvedic monograph on Vijaya — purification, formulations, indications
~13th century CE
Sharangadhara Samhita codifies Vijaya in mainstream Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia (Madhyama Khanda 7/22)
~16th century CE
Bhavaprakasha Nighantu (Karpuradi Varga) gives the standard classical pharmacology still cited today
1894
Indian Hemp Drugs Commission (British Raj) — landmark inquiry concludes "moderate use of cannabis... produces no injurious effects"
1985
NDPS Act enacted — but leaves and seeds explicitly exempted in §2(iii)(b), preserving Bhang and classical Ayurvedic use
1995
AYUSH Ministry (then ISM&H) recognizes ~80 classical Vijaya formulations under Schedule E(1) of D&C Act
2017
CCRAS (Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences) initiates clinical trials on Vijaya for chronic pain, oncology supportive care
2018
Uttarakhand becomes first Indian state to license commercial hemp cultivation for medicinal/industrial use
2023
Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, J&K follow with licensed medicinal cannabis frameworks under Ayurveda
Classical Reference
Ananda Kanda (~10th-12th century CE) — the most detailed classical text on Vijaya, dedicating an entire section (Vishrama 21) to its botany, properties, purification (shodhana), preparation, and indications. Also: Sharangadhara Samhita (Madhyama Khanda 7/22), Bhavaprakasha Nighantu (Karpuradi Varga, verse 70-72), Yogaratnakara, Rasa Tarangini (Taranga 24), and Bhaishajya Ratnavali. Notably absent from Charaka Samhita (~600 BCE) and Sushruta Samhita — Vijaya enters Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia in the medieval period.
Health Benefits of Vijaya
Chronic Pain (Vatika Shoola)
Classical indication in conditions like sciatica, neuralgia, and post-surgical pain. Trailokya Vijaya Rasa and Vijaya Ghrita are the principal formulations. Modern research at AIIMS and Tata Memorial supports cannabis-based medicines for chronic neuropathic pain that doesn't respond to standard analgesics — but ALWAYS via licensed preparation under BAMS/MD supervision.
Insomnia (Nidranasha)
Bhavaprakasha lists Nidrajanaka (sleep-inducing) as a primary property of shodhita Vijaya in low doses. Used in formulations like Madanananda Modaka. The mechanism aligns with modern understanding of cannabinoids modulating GABAergic and serotonergic pathways. Not first-line — Ashwagandha, Jatamansi, and Tagara are safer for routine sleep complaints.
Chronic Diarrhea & IBS (Atisara, Grahani)
Grahi (binding) action makes Vijaya highly effective for chronic diarrhea unresponsive to first-line treatments. Madanananda Modaka and Jatiphaladi Churna are the classical formulations. Particularly indicated for Pittavata-grahani with mucus, cramping, and weight loss.
Loss of Appetite & Digestive Weakness (Mandagni, Aruchi)
Vijaya is classically Pachani (digestive) and Ruchya (appetizing) — restoring agni in chronic atrophy and post-illness recovery. Used in measured doses with corrective herbs (black pepper, ginger).
Cancer Supportive Care
CCRAS-led integrative oncology research explores Vijaya formulations for chemotherapy-induced nausea, anorexia, and chronic cancer pain — paralleling modern medical cannabis applications. Strictly hospital-supervised, not OTC.
Spasticity & Neurological Conditions
Vijaya Ghrita has been used classically for ardita (facial palsy) and pakshaghata (hemiplegia). Limited modern research suggests potential adjunct value in multiple sclerosis-related spasticity, mirroring international medical cannabis applications.
Key Compounds & Phytochemistry
Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)
Primary psychoactive cannabinoid. Concentrated in flowering tops/resin (Ganja, Charas — controlled). Trace amounts in shodhita leaf preparations. Acts on CB1 receptors in CNS — mediates analgesic, antiemetic, sleep-inducing effects.
Cannabidiol (CBD)
Non-psychoactive cannabinoid with anti-inflammatory, anxiolytic, and anticonvulsant properties. Increasingly the focus of legitimate Indian medical cannabis research. Acts via CB2 receptors and other pathways.
Cannabinol (CBN)
Sedating cannabinoid that develops as THC oxidizes — explains the Nidrajanaka (sleep-inducing) profile of aged classical preparations.
β-caryophyllene
Sesquiterpene that binds CB2 receptors — contributes to anti-inflammatory effects without psychoactivity. Also abundant in black pepper, the classical "anupana" pairing for Vijaya.
Cannabigerol (CBG)
Mother cannabinoid — precursor to other cannabinoids. Anti-bacterial, neuroprotective, supports the entourage effect that classical multi-herb formulations leverage.
Nutritional Highlights
- Vijaya leaves contain over 100 cannabinoids, 200+ terpenes, and 20+ flavonoids — among the most chemically complex herbs in Ayurveda
- Cannabis seeds (legal under NDPS) are a complete plant protein with ~25% protein and all 9 essential amino acids — used in classical Ayurvedic recipes for vyanga (skin) and as a daily protein source in Himalayan diets
- Endocannabinoid system (ECS) — the body's native cannabinoid receptors — was only discovered in 1992, validating Ayurvedic understanding that Vijaya acts on a "subtle" body system regulating mood, sleep, pain, and appetite
- Modern phytochemistry confirms the "entourage effect" — Vijaya's cannabinoids work synergistically with corrective herbs (maricha, jatiphala) in classical formulations, mirroring multi-herb Ayurvedic logic
Traditional Preparations
In classical Ayurveda, Vijaya was never used raw. Leaves were shodhita (purified) by repeated boiling in cow milk or godugdha-bharjana (frying in ghee), then dried and powdered. The purified powder was combined with corrective herbs — typically Maricha (black pepper), Sunthi (ginger), Jatiphala (nutmeg), and Sharkara (sugar) — to balance its sharp Ushna virya and prevent intoxication. Used internally only for specific clinical indications: chronic atisara (diarrhea), grahani (IBS), nidranasha (insomnia), vatika shoola (neuropathic pain), kasa-shvasa (chronic cough/asthma). Externally applied as Vijaya Ghrita for joint pain and certain neurological conditions.
Vijaya Shodhana (purification — prerequisite to all internal use)
Method: Fresh leaves boiled 7 times in cow's milk (godugdha) OR fried in cow ghee until oil is absorbed and leaves crisp. Ananda Kanda and Rasa Tarangini detail the protocol. Eliminates raw irritant properties; standardizes potency.
Used for: Mandatory pre-treatment — never use raw Vijaya internally per classical Ayurveda.
Trailokya Vijaya Rasa
Method: Rasashastra (mineral-organic) preparation: shodhita Vijaya + parad-gandhak (mercury-sulphur kajjali) + maricha + jatiphala + lavanga, ground with bhavana of trikatu kwath. Manufactured by Baidyanath, Dabur, Dhootapapeshwar.
Used for: Chronic atisara (diarrhea), jvara (especially malarial), kasa (cough), vata-kapha pradhana shoola. Schedule E(1) — only via licensed practitioner.
Vijaya Ghrita
Method: Cow ghee cooked with kalka (paste) of shodhita Vijaya leaves and decoction of corrective herbs (Yashtimadhu, Bala, Ashwagandha) per Bhaishajya Ratnavali. Strained, stored.
Used for: Vatavyadhi (neurological disorders), ardita (facial palsy), pakshaghata, spasticity, intractable insomnia.
Madanananda Modaka
Method: Confection (modaka) of shodhita Vijaya, jatiphala, lavanga, kapikacchu (kaunch beej), vidari, ashwagandha bound with ghee and sugar candy. Yogaratnakara classical formulation.
Used for: Chronic IBS-D, post-prandial diarrhea with weakness, debility, sexual asthenia. Tonic-grade formulation.
Jatiphaladi Churna
Method: Powder of jatiphala, lavanga, ela, twak, tagara, jatamansi, kakkola, and small portion of shodhita Vijaya — per Sharangadhara Samhita.
Used for: Pediatric and adult chronic diarrhea (notably gentler — used even in children at 50-200 mg dosing under supervision).
Vijayasava
Method: Fermented liquid preparation (asava) of Vijaya with dhataki flowers, jaggery, and aromatics. Rare in modern manufacture but documented in classical texts.
Used for: Chronic digestive weakness, malabsorption, wasting syndromes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Vijaya / cannabis legal in India?
Yes, under specific conditions. The NDPS Act 1985, Section 2(iii)(b), explicitly EXEMPTS cannabis leaves and seeds from the definition of controlled "cannabis (hemp)". Licensed Ayurvedic medicines containing Vijaya are approved under Schedule E(1) of the Drugs & Cosmetics Act and are dispensed by registered BAMS/MD practitioners. The flowering tops (Ganja) and resin (Charas) remain controlled substances. Bhang (a leaf-based traditional preparation) is regulated at the state level — legal in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, and others; restricted elsewhere. Self-cultivation or unlicensed possession of resin/flowers is illegal.
Why is Vijaya not in Charaka Samhita or Sushruta Samhita?
Honest answer — it isn't. Vijaya enters Ayurvedic literature in the medieval period via texts like Ananda Kanda (~10th-12th century CE), Sharangadhara Samhita (~13th century), and Bhavaprakasha Nighantu (~16th century). The classical samhitas predate widespread Indian use of cannabis as medicine. This doesn't diminish its Ayurvedic legitimacy — multiple herbs (e.g., Trikatu, Triphala) gained prominence post-classically and are now foundational. It does mean Vijaya's pharmacology was developed empirically in the rasashastra era, with sophistication.
What is the difference between Vijaya, Bhanga, Ganja, and Charas?
All four come from the same plant — Cannabis sativa — but refer to different parts and preparations. Vijaya = the classical Ayurvedic name for the medicinal herb. Bhanga / Bhang = leaves, the form used in classical Ayurveda and exempt under NDPS. Ganja = the dried flowering tops, controlled under NDPS. Charas = resin scraped from live plants, controlled under NDPS. Hashish = pressed resin, controlled. Only Bhanga (leaves) is legal in classical Ayurvedic use, and even then only after shodhana (purification) and within licensed formulations.
Can I buy Trailokya Vijaya Rasa or Vijaya Ghrita over the counter?
No. Vijaya-containing classical formulations are Schedule E(1) drugs under the Indian Drugs & Cosmetics Act. They require a prescription from a registered BAMS or MD (Ayurveda) practitioner and can only be dispensed by licensed Ayurvedic pharmacies. Online sellers offering these without prescription verification are operating illegally. To use these formulations safely and lawfully, consult a verified BAMS doctor — Chikitsak lists ~36,000 of them across India, many with consultation booking available.
What conditions does classical Ayurveda treat with Vijaya?
Per Bhavaprakasha and Ananda Kanda, the principal indications are: (1) chronic atisara/grahani (diarrhea, IBS), (2) nidranasha (intractable insomnia), (3) vatika shoola (neuropathic pain — sciatica, neuralgia), (4) mandagni/aruchi (severe digestive weakness), (5) kasa-shvasa (chronic cough, asthma — limited use), (6) ardita/pakshaghata (facial palsy, hemiplegia — externally as Vijaya Ghrita). Modern Indian research extends this to: chemotherapy-induced nausea, oncology pain palliation, multiple sclerosis spasticity, and certain refractory epilepsy syndromes (CBD-rich preparations).
Is Vijaya safe for daily use?
No — emphatically not. Unlike Ashwagandha or Triphala which are daily Rasayanas, Vijaya is a Tikshna (sharp), Madakari (intoxicant) herb meant for specific clinical indications, time-limited courses, and never as a daily tonic. Habitual use leads to dependence, cognitive dulling (medha-kshaya), and aggravated pitta. Bhavaprakasha explicitly warns against prolonged use without medical supervision.
Does Vijaya cause addiction?
Cannabis use disorder is a recognized clinical entity in modern psychiatry, with ~9% of regular users developing dependence. Classical Ayurveda anticipated this — Bhavaprakasha and Yogaratnakara mandate that Vijaya be taken only for the prescribed clinical course, never as a recreational or daily substance. Properly used in licensed formulations under BAMS supervision, addiction risk is minimal. Self-administered raw cannabis carries significant dependence risk and is also illegal.
What is the role of shodhana (purification)?
Shodhana is non-negotiable in classical Ayurvedic Vijaya use. The classical method — boiling 7 times in cow milk OR frying in ghee — serves three purposes: (1) eliminates raw irritant properties (improves digestive tolerability), (2) standardizes cannabinoid profile (reduces variability), (3) reduces psychoactive intensity (favors therapeutic over intoxicating effects). All licensed manufacturers (Baidyanath, Dabur, Dhootapapeshwar, Hamdard) shodhita Vijaya per pharmacopoeia standards. Raw cannabis is never used in legitimate Ayurvedic medicine.
Can Vijaya treat anxiety or stress?
Counter-intuitively, Vijaya is generally CONTRAINDICATED in primary anxiety disorders — even classical texts note that excess Vijaya causes mati-bhrama (mental confusion) and unmada (mental disturbance). Modern research confirms cannabis can worsen panic attacks and trigger paranoia in susceptible individuals. For anxiety, the preferred Ayurvedic herbs are Ashwagandha, Brahmi, Jatamansi, and Shankhpushpi — far safer and equally effective per clinical trials. Vijaya is reserved for cases where anxiety is secondary to chronic pain or terminal illness, in palliative settings.
Where can I find Vijaya formulations legally?
Three legitimate channels: (1) A consultation with a licensed BAMS/MD practitioner who issues a prescription — search Chikitsak's directory of ~36,000 verified doctors. (2) Government Ayurveda hospitals (CCRAS-affiliated, AIIMS Integrative Medicine departments). (3) Licensed Ayurvedic pharmacies that verify prescriptions. Avoid: online vendors selling Vijaya products without prescription verification, "wellness" cannabis products sold as supplements, and any seller offering raw cannabis or "ganja" — these are illegal regardless of marketing claims.
How is medicinal cannabis research progressing in India?
CCRAS (Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences) launched cannabis research initiatives in 2017, with formal trials at AIIMS New Delhi, Tata Memorial Mumbai, and several state Ayurvedic colleges. Focus areas: chronic neuropathic pain, oncology supportive care, drug-resistant epilepsy (CBD-dominant preparations). Uttarakhand (2018), MP (2020), HP (2022), J&K (2023) have licensed medicinal hemp cultivation. India is positioning itself as a global hub for "scientifically-validated traditional cannabis medicine" — bridging Ayurveda and modern phytopharmaceuticals.
Educational disclaimer
This page is provided as an educational reference compiled from classical Ayurvedic texts (Sharangadhara Samhita, Bhavaprakasha Nighantu, Ananda Kanda, Yogaratnakara, Rasa Tarangini, Bhaishajya Ratnavali) and current Indian regulatory frameworks (NDPS Act 1985, Drugs & Cosmetics Act, AYUSH Ministry guidelines). It is NOT medical advice and NOT a recommendation for self-administration. Cannabis remains a controlled substance in India outside specifically exempted forms (leaves, seeds) and licensed Ayurvedic medicines. Always consult a registered BAMS/MD (Ayurveda) practitioner before considering any Vijaya-containing formulation.