Zhang Ji (Chinese physician)

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Zhang Zhongjing

Zhang Ji (Template:Zh-stp, 150 - 219), style name Zhang Zhongjing (Template:Zh-stpw), an Eastern Han (Template:Zh-tp) physician and author of the Shanghan Zabing Lun (Template:Zh-tp, lit. "Treatise on Cold Pathogenic and Miscellaneous Diseases"), was one of the most eminent Chinese physicians during the later years of the Eastern Han era. He lived in today's Nanyang in Henan Province. During his time, with warlords fighting for their own territories, many people were infected with febrile disease. Zhang's family was no exception. He learned medicine by studying from his townsfellow Zhang Bozu, assimilating from previous medicinal literature, and collecting many prescriptions elsewhere, finally writing the medical masterpiece Shanghan Zabing Lun. Unfortunately, shortly after its publication the book was lost during wartime. Due to Zhang's contribution to Traditional Chinese medicine he is often regarded as the sage of Chinese medicine.

Zhang's masterpiece was collected by later people and compiled into two books, namely the Shanghan Lun (in full, Shanghan Zabing Lun or "Treatise on Febrile Diseases") which was a discourse on how to treat epidemic infectious diseases causing fevers prevalent during his era, and the other, highly influential doctrine Jingui yaolue (金匱要略, "Synoptic Essentials from the Golden Cabinet"), a compendium of his clinical experiences. He established medication principles and summed up the medicinal experience up until the Han Dynasty, thus making a great contribution to the development of Traditional Chinese Medicine.

Though extremely well known in modern Chinese medicine and considered one of the finest Chinese physicians in history very little is known of his life.[1] According to later sources he was born in Nie-Yang (Template:Zh-tp, modern day Nanyang), held an official position in Changsha and lived from approximately 150 to 219CE.[2] Exact dates regarding his birth, death and works vary; an upper limit of 220CD is generally accepted.[3]

Revered for authoring the Shāng Hán Zá Bìng Lùn,[4] Zhang Ji is considered to have founded the Cold Damage or "Cold Disease" school of Chinese medicine and is widely considered the seminal expert to this day. For more information on Zhong Ji it is best to refer directly to the Shang Han Lun.

See also

References

  1. Shāng Hán Lùn: On Cold Damage, Translation & Commentaries. Craig Mitchell, Féng Yè and Nigel Wiseman 1999, p. 2
  2. Mitchell et al. 1999, p. 2
  3. See Mitchell et al. 1999, p. 1-2, Early Chinese Texts: A Bibliographical Guide. Michael Loewe (ed.) 1993, p. 197 for discussion.
  4. This text survives as the Shang Han Lun (Template:Zh-tp, lit. "On Cold Damage") and Jin Gui Yao Lüe (Template:Zh-tp, lit. "Essential Prescriptions of the Golden Coffer"); two texts which have been heavily reconstructed several times up to the modern era. See Mitchell et al. 1999, p. 1-4.


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