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[Tai ping sheng hui fang (Taiping Holy Prescriptions for Universal Relief) and the compilation during the early Song Dynasty].
Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi. 2010 Jul; 40(4):198-205.ZY

Abstract

Tai ping sheng hui fang, the first medical formulary of the Song Dynasty, compiled from the 3(rd) year of Taiping-xingguo reign to the 3(rd) year of Chunhua reign (978 ∼ 992), under the edict of the Taizong Emperor, was popularly applied and extensively circulated and called "the first formulary of the Dynasty". It is extremely significant in the medical history of the Song Dynasty due to its theory of prescription art, practical prescriptions and clinical practice. During the process of its circulation, different versions appeared, including the Guozijian Orthodox Version, Guozijian Small-character Version, Chongwen Hall Abridged Version, Newly Carved Version of Zhuanyunsi, and the Local Abridged Version, thus adapting to the demands of various walks of life in the society. Its unique role in the development of the Song society was founded by its introduction, application and popularization by the emperors, local officials, medical scholars, diplomatic envoys, and intellectuals. The "kind administration" of the authority and the government was further greatly facilitated by the involvement of the government and the introduction of printing. Its practical prescriptions became forceful tools to prevent and treat diseases, to conquer witchcraft, to protect local social security, and to pronounce the merits of officials and physicians at all levels.

Authors+Show Affiliations

The Institute for the History of Natural Science, China Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100010, China.

Pub Type(s)

English Abstract
Historical Article
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

chi

PubMed ID

21122337

Citation

Han, Yi. "[Tai Ping Sheng Hui Fang (Taiping Holy Prescriptions for Universal Relief) and the Compilation During the Early Song Dynasty]." Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi (Beijing, China : 1980), vol. 40, no. 4, 2010, pp. 198-205.
Han Y. [Tai ping sheng hui fang (Taiping Holy Prescriptions for Universal Relief) and the compilation during the early Song Dynasty]. Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi. 2010;40(4):198-205.
Han, Y. (2010). [Tai ping sheng hui fang (Taiping Holy Prescriptions for Universal Relief) and the compilation during the early Song Dynasty]. Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi (Beijing, China : 1980), 40(4), 198-205.
Han Y. [Tai Ping Sheng Hui Fang (Taiping Holy Prescriptions for Universal Relief) and the Compilation During the Early Song Dynasty]. Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi. 2010;40(4):198-205. PubMed PMID: 21122337.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - [Tai ping sheng hui fang (Taiping Holy Prescriptions for Universal Relief) and the compilation during the early Song Dynasty]. A1 - Han,Yi, PY - 2010/12/3/entrez PY - 2010/12/3/pubmed PY - 2011/5/12/medline SP - 198 EP - 205 JF - Zhonghua yi shi za zhi (Beijing, China : 1980) JO - Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi VL - 40 IS - 4 N2 - Tai ping sheng hui fang, the first medical formulary of the Song Dynasty, compiled from the 3(rd) year of Taiping-xingguo reign to the 3(rd) year of Chunhua reign (978 ∼ 992), under the edict of the Taizong Emperor, was popularly applied and extensively circulated and called "the first formulary of the Dynasty". It is extremely significant in the medical history of the Song Dynasty due to its theory of prescription art, practical prescriptions and clinical practice. During the process of its circulation, different versions appeared, including the Guozijian Orthodox Version, Guozijian Small-character Version, Chongwen Hall Abridged Version, Newly Carved Version of Zhuanyunsi, and the Local Abridged Version, thus adapting to the demands of various walks of life in the society. Its unique role in the development of the Song society was founded by its introduction, application and popularization by the emperors, local officials, medical scholars, diplomatic envoys, and intellectuals. The "kind administration" of the authority and the government was further greatly facilitated by the involvement of the government and the introduction of printing. Its practical prescriptions became forceful tools to prevent and treat diseases, to conquer witchcraft, to protect local social security, and to pronounce the merits of officials and physicians at all levels. SN - 0255-7053 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21122337/ L2 - http://journal.yiigle.com/LinkIn.do?linkin_type=pubmed&issn=0255-7053&year=2010&vol=40&issue=4&fpage=198 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -