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Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine Following the works of some of the most influential Chinese emperors and physicians, other medical contributions across China, Japan, and Korea were made resulting in what is now considered traditional Chinese medicine These books feature discoveries in acupuncture, surgery, herbal remedies, and early thoughts on communicable diseases
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine 锁阳固精丸 (Chinese medicine to improve men's health and fertility), n d 安神赞育丸 (Chinese medicine to improve women's health and pregnancy), n d Pharmaceutical advertisement of aspirin-tablets, ca 1935
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine Considered to be the father of Chinese agriculture, this legendary emperor taught his people how to cultivate grains as food, to avoid killing animals He is said to have tasted hundreds of herbs to test their medicinal value and is assumed to be the author of Shen-nung pen ts'ao ching (Divine Husbandman's Materia Medica), the earliest extant
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine Chung Chung-ching (神農), fl 168-196 AD, drawing published in Zhongguo li dai ming yi tu zhuan (Biographies and portraits of Chinese famous doctors in past dynasties), 1987 Regarded as one of the great physicians of the Han dynasty (206 BC-220 AD), the most glorious period in Chinese medical history, Chang Chung-ching (神農) wrote
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine Chinese medicine seems to have reached its peak during the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) when Li Shih-chen 李時珍 wrote his Pen ts'ao kang mu (The Great Herbal) This great pharmacopoeia, which summarizes what was known of herbal medicine up to the late 16th century, describes in detail more than 1800 plants, animal substances, minerals, and
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine This first volume of Shen-nung pen ts'ao pei yao i fang ho pien (Herbal and Prescriptions), was published in 1740 and is one part of the most extensive documents in Chinese medical history The remaining volumes cover pharmacology and the therapeutic uses of the materia medica
Class 1: Western Influence of Modern Medicine and Public Health in . . . Bu, Liping “Social Darwinism, Public Health and Modernization in China, 1895-1925 ” In Uneasy Encounters: The Politics of Medicine and Health in China 1900-1937 Edited by Iris Borowy Germany: Peter Lang, 2009, pp 93-124 Croizier, Ralph C Traditional Medicine in Modern China: Science, Nationalism, and the Tensions of Cultural Change
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine Illustration of Yin and Yang, 1974 Illustration of Yin and Yang, published in “A brief outline of Chinese medical history with particular reference to acupuncture” by Choh-Luh Li, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 1974
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine 外科秘要 (Surgery Handbook), 1684 外科秘要 (Surgery Handbook), Omura, Ansei (大村安成), 1684 This Japanese book on surgery is based on some of the canonical books of Chinese traditional medicine, stating diagnoses, pathology, and treatments
Traditional Chinese Medicine - National Library of Medicine 安神赞育丸 (Chinese medicine to improve women's health and pregnancy), n d 安神赞育丸 (Chinese medicine to improve women's health and pregnancy), Tianjin Medicine Factory, n d To market Chinese medicines to a more modernized audience, ads, such as this one, used ideal feminine images to make these traditional therapeutics more