Bian Que 1
Bian Que (407 BC-3 BC10) was a famous doctor in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, Zheng (now Renqiu City, Cangzhou City, Hebei Province) was born in Bohai County.
Because of his superb medical skills, he was honored as an imperial doctor, so people at that time used the name of "Bian Que", the imperial doctor of the Yellow Emperor in ancient mythology, to call him.
When I was young, I studied medicine in Chang Sangjun, and I passed on my medical skills. I was good in all subjects. Zhao is regarded as gynecology, Zhou as ENT, and pediatrics is famous all over the world.
Li Yi, the doctor of Qin Dynasty, had better be assassinated than jealous of it. Bian Que founded the pulse diagnosis method of traditional Chinese medicine, which was the first of its kind in traditional Chinese medicine. According to legend, the famous classic of Chinese medicine "Difficult Classics" was written by Bian Que.
2. Hua tuo
Hua Tuo (about AD 145-208) was born in Peiguoqiao County, a famous doctor at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty.
Hua Tuo, Dong Feng and Zhang Zhongjing are also called "Jian 'an Three Magical Doctors". When I was young, I studied abroad and practiced medicine all over Anhui, Henan, Shandong, Jiangsu and other places. I didn't want to make progress in studying medicine. He has a comprehensive medical skill, especially good at surgery. And proficient in internal medicine, gynecology, pediatrics, acupuncture. In his later years, he was suspected by Cao Cao and tortured to death in prison.
Hua tuo was called "the master of surgery" and "the originator of surgery" by later generations. Later generations used to call him Hua Tuo, an imperial doctor, and praised him as a doctor with superior medical skills with "Hua Tuo reincarnation" and "Yuan reincarnation".
3. Zhang Zhongjing
Zhang Zhongjing (about 150 ~ 154—— about 2 15 ~ 2 19) was born in Nieyang County, Nanyang, Eastern Han Dynasty (now Zhangzhai Village, Gedong Town, dengzhou city City, Henan Province). A famous doctor in the late Eastern Han Dynasty was honored as a medical sage by later generations.
Zhang Zhongjing extensively collected medical prescriptions and wrote the masterpiece Treatise on Febrile Diseases handed down from ancient times. The established principle of syndrome differentiation and treatment is the basic principle of TCM clinic and the soul of TCM.
In the aspect of prescription science, Treatise on Febrile Diseases has also made great contributions, creating many dosage forms and recording a large number of effective prescriptions. The therapeutic principle of differentiation of six meridians established by him has been highly praised by doctors in past dynasties.
This is the first medical monograph in China to establish the law of syndrome differentiation and treatment from theory to practice. It is one of the most influential works in the medical history of China, and it is a necessary classic for later scholars to study Chinese medicine, which has been widely valued by medical students and clinicians.
4. Huangfu Mi
Huangfu Mi (Mi) (2 15 —282) A young man named Jing, named Shi An, was named Mr. Xuanyan. People from Chaona County (now Lingtai County, Gansu Province) and Anding County moved to Xin 'an (now Xin 'an County, Henan Province).
A scholar, medical scientist and historian in the Western Jin Dynasty of the Three Kingdoms, and the great-grandson of Huangfusong, a famous Eastern Han Dynasty. He devoted himself to writing all his life, and then he got wind arthralgia and insisted on writing. When Emperor Wu of Jin was tired of collecting books, he borrowed books from himself, and Emperor Wu gave him a car. His Classic of Acupuncture A-B is the first monograph on acupuncture in China.
5. Ye Gui
Ye Gui (A.D. 1666 ~ 1745), whose real name was Shi Tian, whose real name was Xiang Yan, was nicknamed Mr. Nanyang. Jiangsu Wuxian (now Suzhou, Jiangsu) people. Ye Gui was a famous doctor in Qing Dynasty and one of the four experts on febrile diseases.
His ancestral home was Shexian, Anhui, and his great-grandfather Ye Fengshan moved to Suzhou from Lantian Village, Shexian, Anhui, and lived next to Shangjinqiao, so Ye Gui was named an old man in Shang Jin in his later years.
Baidu Encyclopedia —— Ten Famous Doctors in Ancient China