• Title/Summary/Keyword: Bencao Gangmu

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The Appropriation of Donguibogam and Bencao Gangmu and the Shaping of Distinctive Korean Medicine in the late Joseon Dynasty ("동의보감(東醫寶鑑)"과 "본초강목(本草綱目)"의 한국적 전유(專有)와 조선후기 의학 특징의 형성 -"본초유함(本草類函)"과 "본초유함요령(本草類函要領)"을 중심으로-)

  • Kwon, Oh-Min;Cha, Wung-Seok;Park, Sang-Young;Oh, Jun-Ho;Ahn, Sang-Woo
    • Korean Journal of Oriental Medicine
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    • v.17 no.3
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    • pp.17-24
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    • 2011
  • Bonchoyuham Nyoryeong(本草類函要領) shows how Donguibogam(東醫寶鑑) -Mirror of Eastern Medicine- is understood, digested into Korean medicine, and at the same time how it participated in the historical shaping of Korean medicine since the publishing in the early 17th century. The author, Hyeon Jae-deok, internalized the structure, content, and significance of Donguibogam and drew out a novel, concise, but comprehensive type of medical manual, while many other medical books since the 17century in Korea are estimated to have been an abridged edition of the Donguibogam. It may well be estimated as exemplar of the extent to which Donguibogam informed Korean medicine since the 17 century. The book shows as well how Bencao Gangmu(本草綱目) -Compendium of Materia Medica- and Donguibogam are merged and set a new medical stream in the 19th century Korea. Hyeon Jae-deok looked at the Bencao Gangmu from the lens of clinical treatment and prescription such that he focused on sections, elements, or parts of procedures, treatments, and prescriptions, not on the herbal taxonomic knowledge of the book. This perspective was embodied in Bonchoyuham(本草類函), which cited simple remedies, prescriptions, or treatments from Bencao Gangmu.

Knowledge on Fish in the Imwon-Gyeongje-Ji from a Korean Medical Perspective - A Comparative Study with the Dongui-bogam - (『림원경제지(林園經濟志)』 어류지식의 한의학적 고찰 - 『동의보감(東醫寶鑑)』과의 비교를 중심으로 -)

  • JEON, Jongwook
    • Journal of Korean Medical classics
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    • v.35 no.3
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    • pp.71-90
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    • 2022
  • Objectives : This paper summarizes contents on fish in the Injeji and Jeoneo-Ji parts in the Imwon-Gyeongje-Ji and compares them with those in the Dong-uibogam from a Korean Medical perspective. Methods : Most of the knowledge of fish in the Imwon-Gyeongje-Ji is based on preceding material medica studies such as the Dongui-bogam in Joseon, the Bencao-gangmu in China, and the Hwahan Samjaedohoe in Japan. The influential relationships and the process of change among these knowledge information were examined within the context of each literature's development or through identifiable changes in knowledge on each particular kind of fish. Results & Conclusions : In the Imwon-Gyeongje-Ji, the consisting 16 parts are organically connected, sometimes functioning as cross-references. In particular, the medical contents on the efficacy of fish for treating disease is closely linked to contents on fish ecology and environment as written in the Jeoneo-Ji, which deals with the field of living things. On the more detailed knowledge on about 30 kinds of fish, one could grasp the formation process and changes of East Asian traditional knowledge on fishkind among historical study of influential Chinese texts, new stimulation and methodology through Japanese literature on natural history, and dynamic processes of inheriting and selectively accepting traditional knowledge of Joseon.

Comparison of Zhusang Between as Discovered in a Medical Book Excavated in China and Other Classical Books (중국 출토의서에 보이는 '제상(諸傷)'과 전래문헌의 비교 고찰)

  • Lee, Kyung
    • Journal of Korean Medical classics
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.17-26
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    • 2018
  • Objectives : This paper studies Zhushang, which is the name of a disease found in excavated books. Zhusang is the first disease listed in Wushierbingfang, which is a medical textbook excavated at Mawangdui, and Zhusang was followed by diseases such as Jinshang and Renshang. The paper studies what disease each of the word is refering to in terms of graphonomy, and compared the difference of their treatment from other classical texts. Methods : The scope of the study of this paper includes the excavated textbooks that seem to contain any disease related to Zhusang, and the two major text books of these are Wushierbingfang and Wuweihandaiyijian. Then Shennongbencao jing, which is the one of the earlier books on herbology, and Bencao gangmu, which was written based on the former, wer used to make comparisons. Parts in Donguibogam that seem to be related to the parts in the excavated texts were also compared. The study was done by first performing historical research on the names of the diseases in the excavated books, and compared them with the contents of the classical texts. Results : The Zhushang discovered in Wushierbingfang refers to wounds caused by metal or wood. It was interesting how they created a word for diseases depending on the cause. Only Jinshang is found in Wuweihandaiyijian, and the fact that different causes gave way to different names tells us that they had corresponding treatment. The categorization of Zhushang, Jinshang, and Renshang is corresponded better in Donguibogam than Chinese medical books.