From Siberia to Mongolia and China, from the Swedish Pharmacopoeia published in 1755 to centuries earlier with the Vikings, the potentially potenti properties of rhodiola rosea have been exploited by traditional medicines for centuries now. Even in the past several decades, researchers have undertaken expeditions to remote villages in mountainous areas of Asia only to find use of the golden root for a broad range of reasons. While the long-time use of R. rosea by a number of different disparate and isolated cultures does not prove that rhodiola benefits exist, it certainly should provoke more researchers and scientists to at least consider the possibility that rhodiola rosea is worth further consideration.
In this part of the Rhodiola Rosea Phytomedicinal Overview, learn how early researchers in Russia and Asia discovered and evaluated the first signs of use for rhodiola rosea. Learn how evidence suggests even as far back as the Vikings rhodiola rosea was in use for its endurance and strength improving properties with few rhodiola side effects. Read on to discover who pioneered this research and what they discovered… and what this all might mean to you.
