|
CHANGCHUN, April 23 (Xinhua) -- A Japanese version of
the Compendium of Materia Medica, an ancient Chinese medicine masterpiece, has
been found in Northeast China's Jilin Province.
The Japanese version was translated in 1927 and
published in 1929 by a Japanese publishing house, which produced specialist
reference publications, said Pi Fusheng, a collector of and experton ancient
documents in the province.
The book was spotted at a flea market in Jilin city
by another collector, Pi said.
"It is a rare book even in Japan," Pi said.
The book was probably brought into China by Japanese
medical experts during the 1931-1945 Japanese aggression of China.
The Compendium Of Materia Medica was written by the
pharmacologist and physician Li Shizhen (1518-1592) and published in 1596, four
years after his death.
The book was known to be the most comprehensive
pharmacopoeia in the world, containing specifications of 1,892 medicinal herbs
and 11,000 prescriptions -- all identified by Li himself.
The Compendium of Materia Medica, or Bencao Gangmu in
Chinese, is considered one of the key achievements of China's ancient
civilization for its wealth of information on medicine, mineralogy,botany,
zoology, and natural sciences.
The book was introduced to Japan in the later Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644) and had a huge influence on herbal medicine research there.
It has also been translated into English. Enditem
|