File:Chinese Materia Medica illustration, Ming; Dragon bone Wellcome L0039303.jpg

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Summary

Chinese Materia Medica illustration, Ming: Dragon bone
Author
Wang Shichang et al. (Ming period, 1368-1644)
Title
Chinese Materia Medica illustration, Ming: Dragon bone
Description

Traced copy of an illustration fromBencao pinhui jingyao(Materia Medica Containing Essential and Important Material Arranged in Systematic Order, completed 1505), in red and black ink. In 1503, the Ming emperor Li Zong put imperial physician Liu Wentai in charge of compiling a new herbal (bencao). The resulting work, whichran to 42 volumes, contained entries on 1815 pharmaceutical plants and other substances, with 1358 full-colour illustrations by artists including Wang Shichang. It was completed in the spring of 1505. However, in the summer of that year, The Emperor contracted a fever, which unsuccessfully treated by Liu Wentai, proved fatal. As a result Liu Wentai was banished from court, and the herbal was not allowed to be engraved or published. The original manuscript was preserved in the imperial palace, where only a select few officials were allowed to consult or copy it. The exemplar held in the Library of the China Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine) is a traced facsimile made in the Ming (1368-1644) period by an unknown hand.The illustration shows the medicinal substance known as dragon bone.Bencao pinhui jingyaostates: Dragon bone is first mentioned inShennong bencao jing(The Divine Farmer's Canon of Materia Medica). 'Dragon bone' refers to the fossilized remains of prehistoric creatures. It was believed to calm fright and quieten the mind; arrest sweating and check seminal emission; and strengthen the intestine so as to stop diarrhoea. It was used to treat heart palpitations and 'fright epilepsy'(jingxian); insomnia and excessive dreaming; excessive sweating; profuse menstrual bleeding and vaginal discharge; diarrhoea and loose stools, etc.
Ink drawing
1505


By: Wang Shichang et al. (Ming period, 1368-1644)
Credit line

This file comes from Wellcome Images, a website operated by Wellcome Trust, a global charitable foundation based in the United Kingdom. Refer to Wellcome blog post (archive).
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Notes

Wellcome Images

Keywords: Chinese Medicine, TCM, Medicine, Chinese Traditional, Materia Medica, Wang Shichang et al. (Ming period, 1368-1644)
References
  • Library reference: External Reference Wang Shumin II 4, External Reference Zi 21/1505 Qiu 4 and External Reference Vivienne Lo
  • Photo number: L0039303
Source/Photographer

https://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/obf_images/63/3e/a369c5445db0f12afd03d4ae233c.jpg (hi-res image)

Licensing

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