From Experiment to Establishment: Homeopathy in Travancore

  • Unique Paper ID: 188718
  • PageNo: 3168-3173
  • Abstract:
  • This article maps the development of homeopathy in the princely state of Travancore from roughly 1900 to 1965, charting its journey from a marginal missionary import to an entrenched element of state-supported public health. Though homeopathy originated in Europe with Samuel Hahnemann’s “law of similars,” its reception in India was mediated by colonial medical structures, existing indigenous therapeutics, and a long-standing culture of medical pluralism. Travancore emerges as an early and notable case of legislative and institutional endorsement: beginning with India’s first legislative resolution favouring homeopathy in 1928 and culminating in the Travancore Medical Act of 1943, which legally acknowledged multiple medical systems like Homeopathy, Ayurveda, and Allopathy, on equal terms. Based on archival documents, legislative debates, and institutional records (including the founding of Athurasramam Homoeopathic Medical College), the article foregrounds the contributions of people such as Dr. M. N. Pillai and Swami Athuradas. It also shows how successful epidemic responses and the growth of government dispensaries underpinned homeopathy’s public legitimacy. By placing Travancore’s policy choices within the broader national movement toward medical pluralism, the study contends that the region’s integrative approach to health governance helped shape Kerala’s later public health achievements. The paper contributes to scholarship on state-directed medical reform and the integration of complementary and alternative medicine into public health systems

Copyright & License

Copyright © 2026 Authors retain the copyright of this article. This article is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

BibTeX

@article{188718,
        author = {LAKSHMI S and Dr SUMI MARY THOMAS},
        title = {From Experiment to Establishment: Homeopathy in Travancore},
        journal = {International Journal of Innovative Research in Technology},
        year = {2025},
        volume = {12},
        number = {7},
        pages = {3168-3173},
        issn = {2349-6002},
        url = {https://ijirt.org/article?manuscript=188718},
        abstract = {This article maps the development of homeopathy in the princely state of Travancore from roughly 1900 to 1965, charting its journey from a marginal missionary import to an entrenched element of state-supported public health. Though homeopathy originated in Europe with Samuel Hahnemann’s “law of similars,” its reception in India was mediated by colonial medical structures, existing indigenous therapeutics, and a long-standing culture of medical pluralism. Travancore emerges as an early and notable case of legislative and institutional endorsement: beginning with India’s first legislative resolution favouring homeopathy in 1928 and culminating in the Travancore Medical Act of 1943, which legally acknowledged multiple medical systems like Homeopathy, Ayurveda, and Allopathy, on equal terms. Based on archival documents, legislative debates, and institutional records (including the founding of Athurasramam Homoeopathic Medical College), the article foregrounds the contributions of people such as Dr. M. N. Pillai and Swami Athuradas. It also shows how successful epidemic responses and the growth of government dispensaries underpinned homeopathy’s public legitimacy. By placing Travancore’s policy choices within the broader national movement toward medical pluralism, the study contends that the region’s integrative approach to health governance helped shape Kerala’s later public health achievements. The paper contributes to scholarship on state-directed medical reform and the integration of complementary and alternative medicine into public health systems},
        keywords = {Homeopathy, Travancore, Kerala, medical pluralism, public health history, complementary and alternative medicine, Athurasramam Homoeopathic Medical College, M. N. Pillai, integrative healthcare, medical legislation in India.},
        month = {December},
        }

Cite This Article

S, L., & THOMAS, D. S. M. (2025). From Experiment to Establishment: Homeopathy in Travancore. International Journal of Innovative Research in Technology (IJIRT), 12(7), 3168–3173.

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