From Hai Yao, Yang Yao to Xi Yao: Sinification of Material Medical from the West

被引:0
|
作者
Patrick Chiu [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Hong Kong Society for the History of Pharmacy
[2] International Center for Drug Control Policy Studies, Shanghai
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
K207 [研究、考订、评论]; R-09 [医学史];
学科分类号
060202 ; 060207 ; 0712 ; 120402 ;
摘要
In ancient China, Daoist philosophers developed the concepts of qi(energy), Wu Xing(five elements), and yin(feminine, dark, negative) and yang(masculine, bright, positive) opposite forces between 200 and 600 BCE. Based on these philosophies, Zhen Jiu(acupuncture), Ben Cao(materia medica), and the practice of Qi Gong(energy optimization movements) evolved as the three interrelated therapeutic regimens of Chinese medicine(Note 1). Since the time of Zhang Qian, who discovered China's western regions in the 1st century BCE, Hai Yao(the exotic elements of materia medica from the maritime Silk Road countries), had been transmitted from the ancient land and maritime routes of the Silk Road to China in the past two millennia(Note 2). Since the late 17th century, the English East India Company, later called the British East India Company, introduced Yang Yao(opium) to the Manchu Qing Empire to balance a growing trade deficit for tea export from China to the British Empire. After the First Opium War ended in 1842, enterprising expatriate chemists and druggists in the treaty ports imported Xi Yao(modern medicines from the Western world) for sale to the merchant navy and the local market. From the second half of the 19th century onwards, both Hai Yao and Xi Yao have become a fully integrated part of modern China's armamentarium for the Chinese medicine and Western hospitals and retail pharmacy sectors. This paper articulates the journey of adoption of exotic elements of materia medica from the ancient land and sea routes of the Silk Road, including the western regions and the rest of the world in the past two millennia. Opium traders, ship surgeons, medical and pharmaceutical missionaries, enterprising traders, and policymakers together transformed Ben Cao into Xi Yao during the late Manchu Qing dynasty and the early Nationalist Era.
引用
收藏
页码:319 / 329
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Religious Festivals and Customs of the Yao-Tribes from Kuangtung (Southern China)
    Wist, Hans
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ETHNOLOGIE, 1936, 68 (1-3): : 124 - 141
  • [23] 'BALLAD TO THE HANSHUI RIVER' + 'HANSHUI YAO' TRANSLATED FROM CHINESE BY HU,SHIGUANG
    CAI, QJ
    CHINESE LITERATURE, 1982, (09): : 93 - 94
  • [24] The Protection and Inheritance of the Dressing Culture of the Bai Ku Yao from the Perspective of Cultural Ecology
    Qin, Hai Yan
    Luo, Yan Lian
    MANUFACTURING, DESIGN SCIENCE AND INFORMATION ENGINEERING, VOLS I AND II, 2015, : 958 - 963
  • [25] Purification and characterization of two new allergens from the salivary glands of the horsefly, Tabanus yao
    Ma, D.
    Li, Y.
    Dong, J.
    An, S.
    Wang, Y.
    Liu, C.
    Yang, X.
    Yang, H.
    Xu, X.
    Lin, D.
    Lai, R.
    ALLERGY, 2011, 66 (01) : 101 - 109
  • [26] Report from the Exploration of the Yao of Ling-yun in the Province of Kuang-hsi
    Yen, Fu-li
    Shang, Ch'eng-tsu
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ETHNOLOGIE, 1929, 61 (4-6): : 386 - 391
  • [27] New Species of Meconopsis(Papaveraceae) from Laojun Shan and Yao Shan,Northern Yunnan,China
    YOSHIDA Toshio
    BOUFFORD David E
    植物分类与资源学报, 2012, 34 (02) : 145 - 149
  • [28] A Yao Taoist manuscript from Vietnam ('Book of Illustrations Copied by Liang Jinquan of the Chamber of Clouds')
    Hemmet, Christine
    Lagerwey, John
    REVUE DES MUSEES DE FRANCE-REVUE DU LOUVRE, 2006, (03): : 58 - +
  • [29] TO THE TUNE OF 'LIU YAO CHING' - TRANSLATED FROM CHINESE BY LEUNG,WINNIE,LAI-FONG
    LIU, Y
    RENDITIONS-A CHINESE-ENGLISH TRANSLATION MAGAZINE, 1979, (11-1): : 80 - 81
  • [30] Evaluation of extracts prepared from 16 plants used in Yao ethnomedicine as potential anticancer agents
    Almosnid, Nadin Marwan
    Zhou, Xiaolei
    Jiang, Lihe
    Ridings, Amy
    Knott, Deborah
    Wang, Shuo
    Wei, Fan
    Yuan, Jingquan
    Altman, Elliot
    Gao, Ying
    Miao, Jianhua
    JOURNAL OF ETHNOPHARMACOLOGY, 2018, 211 : 224 - 234