Pre-Qin period: The pre-Qin period was the initial period of traditional Chinese medicine prescriptions, most of which were very simple. At present, there are relatively complete prescriptions, including 52 prescriptions for diseases, health-preserving prescriptions, miscellaneous prescriptions and miscellaneous prescriptions, all of which were dug up by Mawangdui, and many of them were mentioned only after hearing their names. As for the legendary Yi Yin's Jian Yao Jing, it was written in the Han Dynasty.
Bian Que, Cang Gong, Zhongjing and Hua Tuo all have works, and only Treatise on Febrile Diseases has been handed down from generation to generation. The only famous works in this period are Elbow Emergency Prescription, Sketch Prescription and Liu's Ghost Legacy Prescription.
Sui and Tang Dynasties: A large number of prescription books appeared in this period. According to the records of Sui Shu Jing Ji Zhi, there are 256 kinds of prescriptions, with 45 10 volumes. Among them, the book "Four Seas Gathering" is in 2600 volumes. In the Tang Dynasty, Sun Simiao's Prescription for Emergency Use and Prescription for a Thousand Daughters represent the highest level of prescription science in Sui and Tang Dynasties, in addition to the Secret of Foreign Taiwan;
Song and Yuan Dynasties: During the Song Dynasty, several prescription books mainly edited by the Central Committee were famous, such as Pujiu Fang, Taiping Shenghui Fang and Shengji Zonglu. In addition, Xu's Medical Prescription, His Monsoon Medical Prescription, His Treatise on Three Causes and One Disease, His Medical Prescription and His Medical Prescription are all masterpieces of physicians. However, the greatest contribution of the Song Dynasty was "Taiping Huimin Hutchison Bureau";
Ming and Qing Dynasties: Let's start with the official masterpiece Puji Fang, which lists all the prescriptions that have never been seen before. It is said that there are hundreds of thousands of prescriptions, and the first monograph on prescriptions appeared-Wu Kun's medical prescription test; Compendium of Materia Medica contains a large number of prescriptions, exceeding 1 1000. In the Qing Dynasty, the Collection of Medical Prescriptions and Formulas, Chen Xiuyuan Fangge, Fangji, Changsha Fangge, Jingui Fangge and Zhang Bingcheng's Convenient Reader appeared, and many of them became the textbooks of Chinese medicine for later generations.
Republic of China: During the Republic of China, the ideas collided violently, the concept of western medicine gradually prevailed, and Chinese medicine was forced into a dead end. Although there are many great doctors and many medical books, there are not many prescriptions.