Huangfu Mi
Huangfu Mi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chinese woodcut, Famous medical figures; Huangfu Mi, Wellcome Collection L0039322 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 皇甫謐 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 皇甫谧 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Huangfu Mi (215–282), courtesy name Shi'an (Chinese: 士安), was a Chinese physician, essayist, historian, poet, and writer who lived through the late Eastern Han dynasty, Three Kingdoms period and early Western Jin dynasty. He was born in a poor farming family in present-day Sanli village, Chaona, Pingliang,[1] despite being a great-grandson of the famous general Huangfu Song, via Song's son Huangfu Shuxian.[2]
Notable works
Between 256 and 260, toward the end of the state of Cao Wei, he compiled the Canon of Acupuncture and Moxibustion (simplified Chinese: 针灸甲乙经; traditional Chinese: 針灸甲乙經; pinyin: Zhēnjiǔ jiǎyǐ jīng; Wade–Giles: Chen1-chiu3 chia3-i3 ching1), a collection of various texts on acupuncture written in earlier periods. This book in 12 volumes further divided into 128 chapters was one of the earliest systematic works on acupuncture and moxibustion, and it proved to be one of the most influential.[3]
Huangfu Mi also compiled ten books in a series called Records of Emperors and Kings (Chinese: 帝王世紀; pinyin: Dìwáng shìjì). He was also the coauthor of Biographies of Exemplary Women (Chinese: 列女傳; pinyin: Liènǚ Zhuàn) and the author of Biographies of Exemplary Gentlemen (Chinese:高士傳; pinyin: Gāoshì Zhuàn).
See also
References
External links
- Works by Mi Huangfu at Project Gutenberg
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- Chinese alchemy
- Meridian
- Neidan
- Yin and yang
- Daoism
- Qigong
- Taijiquan
- Baopuzi
- Beiji qianjin yaofang
- Bencao gangmu
- Chifeng sui
- Huangdi bashiyi nanjing
- Huangdi neijing (Lingshu jing
- Taisu)
- Jingui yaolüe
- Liu Juanzi Guiyi Fang
- Maishu
- Shanghan lun
- Shennong bencao jing
- Wushi'er bingfang
- Xinxiu bencao
- Yaoxing lun
- Yinshu
- Yinyang shiyi mai jiujing
- Yinshan zhengyao
- Yuzuan yizong jinjian
- Zhubing yuanhou lun
- Zubi shiyi mai jiujing
- Zhenjiu dacheng
- Bian Que (401–310 BCE)
- Chunyu Yi (2nd-century BCE)
- Hua Tuo (140–208)
- Zhang Zhongjing (150–219)
- Huangfu Mi (215–282)
- Dong Feng (c. 3rd century)
- Ge Hong (283–343)
- Sun Simiao (581–682)
- Wang Weiyi (987–1067)
- Tang Shenwei (c. 1056–1093)
- Liu Wansu (1110–1200)
- Zhang Yuansu (c. 1151–1234)
- Zhang Congzheng (1156–1228)
- Song Ci (1186–1249)
- Wang Haogu (1200–1264)
- Wei Yilin (1277–1347)
- Zhu Zhenheng (1282–1358)
- Hu Sihui (fl. 1314–1330)
- Tuệ Tĩnh (1330–c. 1389)
- Tan Yunxian (1461–1554)
- Miao Xiyong (1546–1627)
- Zhang Jiebin (1563–1640)
- Xu Dachun (1693–1771)
- Tang Zonghai (1851–1897/1908)
- Zhang Xichun (1860–1933)
- Yu Yan (1879–1954)
- Cheng Dan'an (1899–1957)
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