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The Compendium of Materia Medica

The Compendium of Materia Medica is a renowned ancient Chinese medical text. Compiled over three decades by Ming dynasty pharmacologist Li Shizhen (1518–1593), it was completed in 1578 (the sixth year of the Wanli era in the Ming dynasty). This work is acclaimed as the “Oriental compendium of medicine.”

I. Main Content and Structure
1. Grand Scale​​
· Comprising 52 volumes, the text catalogs 1,892 medicinal substances (including 374 newly identified entries), 11,096 attached prescriptions, and 1,160 illustrations.
· Organized into a rigorous system: 16 categories (e.g., Water, Fire, Earth, Metals/Minerals, Herbs, Grains, Vegetables, Fruits, Woods, Insects, Scaled Animals, Shelled Animals, Birds, Beasts, Humans) and 60 subcategories.

2. Scientific Classification of Medicinal Substances​​
· Broke from traditional taxonomies by categorizing substances according to natural properties (e.g., plant, animal, mineral) and ecological characteristics, foreshadowing modern natural history methods.
· Examples: Herbs subdivided into mountain herbs, aromatic herbs, poisonous herbs; animals sequenced from lower to higher organisms.

3. Comprehensive Documentation​​
· Each substance features dedicated entries:
- Etymology (释名): Nomenclature/term origin
- Collected Explanations(集解): Geographic distribution & morphology
- Processing Methods(修治): Preparation techniques
- Medicinal Properties(药性): e.g., nature, flavor
- Therapeutic Applications (治病): Clinical efficacy
- Author’s Insights (发明): Li Shizhen’s original commentaries

II. Historical Significance 1. The Culmination of Traditional Chinese Medicine​​
· Systematically synthesized pre-16th century Chinese pharmacological achievements, rectifying historical inaccuracies (e.g., correcting the misidentification of “orchids” as medicinal herbs).
· Emphasized treatment based on syndrome differentiation, highlighting herb compatibility and contraindications.
2. Scientific Impact Beyond Medicine​​
· Pioneered interdisciplinary studies across botany, zoology, mineralogy, and chemistry (e.g., using distillation to extract essential oils).
· Cited by Charles Darwin in The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication as an “ancient Chinese encyclopedia”.
3. Enduring Global Influence​​
· Translated into over twenty languages (Japanese, Korean, Latin, English, French, German, etc.), enabling worldwide dissemination.
· Remains a foundational reference for modern traditional Chinese medicine research and practice.

III. Anecdotes and Controversies
· Li Shizhen’s Dedication:​​
To verify medicinal effects, he personally tested substances
– such as confirming the anesthetic properties of Datura flowers through self-experimentation.
· Historical Limitations:​​
Some entries reflect pre-scientific understanding (e.g., the “Human Body” section prescribing hair and urine for therapeutic use).
·Modern Scientific Validation:​​
In 2015, Nobel Laureate Tu Youyou credited the Compendium of Materia Medica for inspiring her extraction of artemisinin from sweet wormwood (Artemisia annua), a breakthrough antimalarial compound.

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