Top ten ancient physicians in China.
(1), also known as Hui Qing, nicknamed Tong, was born in Huiji (now Shaoxing, Zhejiang) in the late Ming Dynasty. He was an outstanding physician in the Ming Dynasty and a representative of the School of Warming and Tonifying, and his academic thoughts had a great influence on later generations. ② Li Shizhen (1518-1593) was called Li Dongbi. No, by the lake. In his later years, he was born in Hushan, qi zhou, Hubei Province, Han nationality. Author of Compendium of Materia Medica. ③ Chen Jiamo (1486- 1570), Shi Shuren of Xixiang (now the second capital of Qimen, Anhui), was a physician in the Ming Dynasty. When he was weak and sick when he was young, he studied medical knowledge. He is talented and knowledgeable, and has made great achievements in poetry, calligraphy, and especially medicine. Chen Jiamo studied medicine, especially herbal medicine, and wrote two books, Medical Guide and Herbal Medicine. (4) Xia Ying, a physician in Ming Dynasty. The word shihiko. Renhe (now Yuhang, Zhejiang) was born. A world doctor. Pinzushu, writing two volumes of the meridian wing of the spiritual pivot. ⑤ Chun Liu, a medical scientist in Ming Dynasty. Zong Hou was born in Wu Lingren, Huainan (now Jiangsu), with a pure family background and a good medical name. "Primary School Medical Classics Tasting" is to edit the essence of medical classics into verse for easy memory. The book is divided into materia medica, pulse prescription, meridians, pathogenesis, treatment and luck. In addition, it was compiled into Treatise on Febrile Diseases. Xu Yongcheng's Medical Compromise has been supplemented by five volumes, which is also quite useful. ⑥ Zhao Jizong, a native of Cixi, Zhejiang, is an Amin physician. Hongzhi has been a monk for three years. Zhao Jizong compiled his thirty-three medical papers into a book named Essentials of Confucian Medicine, because the purpose of his medical papers was to "outline the main points of various diseases". Zhao Jizong's Essentials of Confucian Medicine is widely circulated. In Japan, Japanese scholar Zhen Liucheng wrote The Essentials of Confucian Medicine. After the book was written, The Essentials of Confucian Medicine was sent to Tai Hospital and published in the Ministry of Rites, which became an important medical material for the DPRK and China at that time.