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167387215Leiden: Lugdunam Bataforum 1673. Gebunden. Lugdunam Bataforum unknown
1652235753Apud Ludovicum Elzevirium Amsterodami 1652. Hardcover mit Lederrücken. Zustand: keine Beschädigungen keine Eintragungen. Rücken Ecken Kanten gut. Restauriert Innen und Außen. Die ersten und letzten Seiten sind gewaschen und verstärkt. Apud Ludovicum Elzevirium, Amsterodami, hardcover
1699000020Kyoto Genroku period 12 1699. Sewn Binding. Good . 2 volumes. 4to 216 x 150 mm. Contemporary Japanese blue rice paper with silk ties paper worn and torn in places; opening leaves of vol. 1 wormed in blank upper margins. Collation:126 ; 90 pp. 11 large mostly full page woodcuts and several smaller woodcuts in text. The volumes are worn; opening leaves of vol. 1 wormed in blank upper margins occasionally affecting part of a character. There is some staining and foxing in text areas and dusting to edges. Numerous Japanese notations in red ink throughout text. Title from table of contents./ "Igaku shiyo sho . cho Ryuunken . " Cf. Kokusho somokuroku v. 1 p. 146./ "Kottaihitsuretsu . ga henshitaru Kinran junkyo . o honmon ni mochiite chuseraretari." <br/><br/>This study on acupuncture was translated from Chinese to Japanese. This is a translation of a classical text from the Yuan dynasty 1264-1368 written by Hua Shou which translated literally is "An Elucidation of The Fourteen Channels or Meridians and their functions." According to the descritionn for a copy in the National Medical Library "The work is divided into three parts: the first dealing with the circulation of the yin and yang in the arms and legs; the second with the course of the qi through the fourteen meridians; and the third with the eight "extraordinary vessels." Unlike many Western anatomies Hua Shou's does not depict or describe the body's musculature or skeleton; in fact during this period and for many centuries afterward Chinese physicians lacked a specific term for "muscle." unknown books