Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Plastic surgery and medical aesthetics - What famous doctors are there in Lanzhou?
What famous doctors are there in Lanzhou?
Ye, Wang, Zou Runan,.

1, leaf

Ye Gui (A.D. 1666 ~ 1745), whose real name was Shi Tian, whose real name was Xiang Yan, was nicknamed Mr. Nanyang. Jiangsu Wuxian (now Suzhou, Jiangsu) people. Ye Gui was a famous doctor in Qing Dynasty and one of the four experts on febrile diseases.

His ancestral home was Shexian, Anhui, and his great-grandfather Ye Fengshan moved to Suzhou from Lantian Village, Shexian, Anhui, and lived next to Shangjinqiao, so Ye Gui was named an old man in Shang Jin in his later years.

Ye Gui was originally "God knows who is not" and was extremely clever. In addition, he is eager for knowledge, learns from others, and can achieve mastery through a comprehensive study. Therefore, he naturally made rapid progress in medical skills. Before he was 30 years old, his medical reputation spread far and wide.

Besides being good at family pediatrics, Shi Tian has unique views and creativity on epidemic febrile diseases, and he knows everything and has his unique views and methods in many aspects.

Ye Gui is best at treating epidemic diseases and acne, and is the first person to discover scarlet fever in China. He has made outstanding achievements in epidemic febrile diseases and is one of the founders of epidemic febrile diseases.

2. Li Maosheng

Li Ehua (1722 ~ 1795), formerly known as Li Maosheng, was born in Lijiaguanzhuang, Houzhen, Shouguang, Shandong, and later settled in Jiuxiang, Shouguang. Born at the end of Kangxi in the Qing Dynasty, he had no intention of career since childhood and was determined to benefit the people. He studied Huang Qi's art with his father, and his medical skills were excellent, especially long surgery. What is particularly admirable is his noble medical ethics and his reputation among the people.

With his noble medical ethics and superb medical skills, Mr. Li Ehua practiced medicine among the people, and saved many dying patients, so he is immortal. Up to now, people still miss him, respect him as a fairy, and worship him from generation to generation, with endless incense.

Li Ehua wrote a book "Clinical Prescription" before his death, which was copied from all sides and spread to neighboring counties. Unfortunately, it has been lost today.

3. Wang

Wang (1798—— 1882) is from Lezhuang, Kongjiaya Town, Anning District. Lanzhou famous doctor and poet in Qing Dynasty. 13-year-old scholar, familiar with the four books and five classics.

From then on, I gave up my career to become a doctor and made a living by practicing medicine. He is generous, loyal, contemptuous of property, noble in medical ethics, ungrateful to others and filial to his parents in the village.

He is enthusiastic about the public welfare undertakings in his hometown. Although Kongjiaya is located on the edge of the Yellow River, it didn't rain in the old days, so people can only look at the water and sigh. Wang mobilized the whole village to block the river dam and repair the waterwheel, and personally surveyed and designed it.

At that time, people's life was difficult because of drought and poor harvest. He gave the dried dates given to him by Qinghai doctors to the farmers who worked every day to satisfy their hunger. After the dam was built, the waterwheel turned and the Yellow River flowed into the dry farmland. To commemorate his contribution, farmers named the dam "Zaoerba".

Wang is not only a famous TCM doctor, but also a poet and calligrapher who loves his motherland and hometown. He is the author of Daya Gallery's Poems and Prescription Collection.

He believed in Neo-Confucianism all his life, attached importance to rationality, and advocated Confucius and Mencius' "orthodox learning" based on "benevolence". He was poor all his life, honest and frank, didn't want to be powerful, was diligent in writing, had superb medical skills and noble medical ethics, and was highly respected by future generations.

4. Zou Runan

Zou Runan (1790— 1845), with the word Shu, was born in Wujin, Jiangsu, and was a physician in the Qing Dynasty. Filial piety, poor family, hidden in medicine. At the beginning of Daoguang, the mountains were secluded, and the villagers discussed the names and fixed the characters.

Shu informed the evolution of the astronomical and geographical situation, and ancient poetry and prose also became a family, not self-deprecating. There are many books written by doctors. Interpretation of typhoid fever, prescriptions of typhoid fever in synopsis of the golden chamber, abstract of medical theory, medical classic bibliography is not passed on. For the published, classic sparse, continuous sparse, classic sparse.

According to legend, Liu's Materia Medica in Qianjiang, Ming Dynasty runs through various schools in Jin and Yuan Dynasties, saying that there are too many blockages, so it is noted that this typhoid fever and golden chamber are sparse, and it is supplemented by thousands of daughters and foreign platforms.

In-depth study of Zhongjing's prescription and essence has become a family statement. I have worked hard all my life, worked hard all my life and wrote a lot. He is knowledgeable, full of arts and sciences, and is a man of the world.

5. Zhao Xuemin

Zhao Xuemin (about 17 19- 1805) was born in Qiantang (now Hangzhou, Zhejiang). Famous medical scientist in Qing dynasty.

His father got two sons in his later years. The eldest son is Zhao, and the second is Zhao. For the purpose of saving the world and benefiting the people, Zhao Fu asked Xue Min to study Confucianism and medicine.

In order to create a good learning environment, their father collected a large number of medical books in Su Yang Garden, and specially opened up a piece of land as a medicine garden, so that the two brothers could eat and live in the garden all year round and receive Confucianism and medical education.

Although Zhao Xuemin was assigned to study Confucianism, his interest focused on medicine. He has a wide range of books, including astronomy, calendars, technology, prescriptions, medicine and divination.

In his spare time, he and his younger brother silently wrote "Acupuncture Tong Ren Tu" to play games. Long-term overuse of eyes, twenty-one years (1756), Zhao Xuemin suffered from eye diseases.

But as soon as he recovered from his eye disease, he wrote a monograph on ophthalmology, Capsule Dew Collection, based on his own experience. Zhao Xuemin is very proud of this book and thinks it can surpass all previous books on ophthalmology. It's a pity that this book didn't come down in the end.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Ye

Baidu Encyclopedia-Li Maosheng

Baidu encyclopedia-Wang

Baidu Encyclopedia-Zou Runan

Baidu Encyclopedia-Zhao Xuemin