• Title/Summary/Keyword: rhymes of medicinal herbs

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A Study on the Nature of medicinals in Rhymes of Medical books in Chosun dynasty (조선 의서 중의 약성가(藥性歌)에 대한 연구 - "제중신편", "의종손익"을 중심으로 -)

  • Oh, Chae-Kun;Yoon, Chang-Yeol
    • Journal of Korean Medical classics
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.49-64
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    • 2011
  • Objectives : This paper is written to identify the origin of the nature of medicinals in Rhymes(藥性歌) in Korean medical books and to analyze their creativity. Methods : We analysed the nature of medicinals in Rhymes contained Chinese and Korean medical books. Results : The Korean medical book New Edition on Universal Relife(濟衆新編), published by Chosun government, recorded the nature of medicinals in Rhymes Recovery from All Ailments(萬病回春) mostly untouched. It can be evaluated the early model of Chosun's nature of medicinals in Rhymes. New Edition on Universal Relife, Gains and Losses of Medical Orthodoxy(醫宗損益) added new rhymes using familiar herbs and vegetables got easily, most new rhymes founded medicinal part of Treasured Mirror of Eastern Medicine (東醫寶鑑). Conclusions : The nature of medicinals in Rhymes is an approach to simplify and improve access on herbal medicine, and is quoted in various forms throughout medical books of Chosun. The entitling it as 'scientific research of herbal medicine based on the nature of medicinals in Rhymes' can clearly be seen as description about superficial result, to persist the decadence of Chosun medicine.

Yaksungga: Rhyme of medicinal herbs in Sugungga, Pansori. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNLGcaGiLJE)

  • Kang, Tae-Hee;Lee, Eue-Hyun;Kim, Ha-Eun;Shin, Byung-Cheul
    • CELLMED
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.17.1-17.3
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    • 2016
  • Pansori is a unique genre of Korean art music. Sugungga is a form of Pansori that is so famous as to be included in the representative five texts of Pansori, and is also a fable about a Dragon King who lived in a palace on the water. The Dragon King had a disease and the major plot of the story is the finding of a cure for his illness. At the beginning of Sugungga, Yaksungga appears on the scene in the form of an ascetic who has knowledge of various herbal medicines. By reciting and singing this medical knowledge, Yaksungga functions as an effective mnemonic technique to aid memorization of the herbs and their properties. Yaksungga exists only in Korea, and functions in Sugungga not only as a dramatic factor in the play, but also as a tool that allows people to easily learn professional medical knowledge during those times, not by books, but by funny rhymes, which gave people the opportunities to apply such knowledge in useful ways.