Vieira, Carla2024-06-182024-06-182024PURE: 92822652PURE UUID: ff3c3d6a-002c-4018-acf4-2e9025915235http://hdl.handle.net/10362/168702UIDB/04666/2020 UIDP/04666/2020This text explores two life paths that crossed under the sign of rattlesnake root, a native plant commonly used by the Seneca in Virginia but only discovered and applied in Euro-pean-origin medicine in the second half of the 18th century. John Tennent and João de Sequeira shared their European roots, the influence of boerhaavian medicine on their medical practice and the enthusiasm for the therapeutic properties of rattlesnake root. Tennent, on settling in Virginia, learnt how the Seneca used this root to cure rattlesnake bites and used it to treat respiratory diseases, particularly pleurisy and pneu-monia; amazed with the good results, he disseminated his discovery in America and Europe, although generating some controversy in the medical community. Sequeira, a doctor with family origins in Brazil and a childhood marked by in-quisitorial harassment, studied medicine in Leiden under the influence of the boerhaavian school; he ended up moving to Williamsburg, where he began to use rattlesnake root as an essential element in his daily medical practice, as he made clear in his notes on the diseases prevalent in Virginia. The focus on the properties of this plant in the treatment of a variety of pathologies is indicative of the valorization of indi-genous medicine and the search for innovative therapeutic treatments at the time.5677914porFitoterapiaHistória Século XVIIIIndígenas - América do NorteMedicina tradicionalPlantas medicinaisRaiz de CascavelRattlesnake RootCrossed Histories in Colonial North American Medicine (18th Century)journal article10.24950/rspmi.2592Histórias Cruzadas na Medicina Norte-Americana Colonial (Séc. XVIII)https://revista.spmi.pt/index.php/rpmi/article/view/2592