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    Summary
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    Missionary pharmacy, a unique European pharmacy model from the 16th-18th centuries, facilitated global drug transfer and influenced modern pharmacy. Its practices offer insights into new phytotherapeutics.

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    Area of Science:

    • History of Pharmacy
    • Medical History
    • Global Health History

    Background:

    • Missionary pharmacy emerged as a distinct European pharmacy type between the 16th and 18th centuries in overseas missions.
    • It developed within the context of Christian evangelism, European expansion, and early globalization.
    • This pharmacy type was shaped by the unique medical-pharmaceutical conditions in mission territories and the missionaries' knowledge.

    Observation:

    • Missionary pharmacy largely followed the model of medieval monastery pharmacies.
    • It served as a precursor to the Medical Mission movement in the early 19th century.
    • Diverse developmental pathways in knowledge exchange, formation, documentation, and transmission defined missionary pharmacy.

    Findings:

    • Missionary pharmacy activities spurred a global transfer of medicinal drugs and associated pharmaceutical knowledge.
    • The Jesuit pharmacies played a key role in institutionalizing this knowledge transfer.
    • This significantly impacted the development of Materiae medicae and modern pharmacy worldwide.

    Implications:

    • The study of trading routes for drugs like Fever bark reconstructs this international knowledge exchange.
    • Contemporary knowledge of missionary pharmacy, particularly regarding non-European indigenous plants, remains valuable.
    • This historical knowledge holds potential for developing novel phytotherapeutics and active pharmaceutical substances.