The Yuzuan yizong jinjian (Chinese: 御纂醫宗金鑑; pinyin: Yùzuǎn yīzōng jīnjiàn)[a] is a Chinese medical compendium published in 1742 AD, during the Qing dynasty. Described as "one of the best treatises on general medicine of modern times", it was a project sanctioned by the Qianlong Emperor and published by the Imperial Printing Office.
Contents
The text is divided into ninety juan or volumes: seventy-four volumes pertain to internal medicine, while the remaining sixteen concern general surgery.[4] More than a quarter of the text reproduces, with added commentary, two parts of an earlier work written by Zhang Zhongjing, the Shanghan zabing lun (Treatise on Cold Damage and Miscellaneous Disorders);[5] Zhang's work is presented by the authors of the Yuzuan yizong jinjian as foundational to Chinese medical orthodoxy.[6]
It also contains what is "probably the largest ensemble of illustrations in a single Chinese medical text", with some 484 such depictions of the human body, ranging from images of children's hands to a "one-page array of 24 anuses".[7] Depictions of smallpox—a disease that was especially deadly to the ruling Manchurians—are particularly prominent and detailed.[8]
Publication history
An initiative of the Qianlong Emperor that was announced on 17 December 1739,[9] the Yuzuan yizong jinjian was published in 1742 by the Imperial Printing Office,[2] which designated it as a national textbook.[10] The text had some eighty contributors, including thirty-nine members of the Imperial Academy of Medicine,[2] most of whom came from the Jiangnan region,[3] specifically the southern provinces of Anhui, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang.[11] Imperial Physicians[b]Wu Qian (吳謙) and Liu Yuduo (劉裕鐸) served as editors-in-chief,[12] under the supervision of Manchu official Ortai.[4]
Legacy
The Yuzuan yizong jinjian has been noted for "its breadth, editorial accuracy, medical coverage, and use of mnemonic rhymes".[13] Moreover, it has "attained the status of a canonical medical classic which, even today, remains obligatory reading for scholars and practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine."[14] K. Chimin Wong and Liande Wu, writing in the History of Chinese Medicine (1973), describe the text as "one of the best treatises on general medicine of modern times."[15]
Notes
^Various English translations include the Imperially Sponsored Golden Mirror of Medical Orthodoxy,[1] the Imperially Commissioned Golden Mirror of the Orthodox Lineage of Medicine,[2] or the Commissioned Golden Mirror of Medical Learning.[3] It is also simply referred to as the Golden Mirror.[2]
^Imperial Physician was the highest rank that a physician at the Imperial Academy of Medicine could have obtained.[12]
Hanson, Marta (2003). "The Golden Mirror in the imperial court of the Qianlong emperor, 1739–1742". Early Science and Medicine. 8 (2): 111–147. doi:10.1163/157338203x00035. PMID15043047.
Smith, Richard J. (2015). The Qing Dynasty and Traditional Chinese Culture. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN9781442221949.
Torck, Mathieu (2009). Avoiding the Dire Straits: An Inquiry Into Food Provisions and Scurvy in the Maritime and Military History of China and Wider East Asia. Harrassowitz. ISBN9783447058728.
Wong, K. Chimin; Wu, Liande (1973). History of Chinese Medicine: Being a Chronicle of Medical Happenings in China from Ancient Times to the Present Period (2nd ed.). AMS Press. ISBN9780404079901.
Wu, Yi-Li (2013). "The Qing Period". In TJ Hinrichs; Linda L. Barnes (eds.). Chinese Medicine and Healing: An Illustrated History. Harvard University Press. pp. 161–208. doi:10.2307/j.ctv15pjz2g.9.