Veterinary celebrity

The life story of Professor Yu Chuan, the founder of modern veterinary medicine in China and a famous expert in veterinary history.

Professor Yuchuan, formerly known as Sun Yuchuan, 1924 165438 was born in June, and was born in Sanyuan County, Shaanxi Province. 1946 graduated from the army veterinary school and worked as a first-class technical assistant in the stallion farm; 65438-0948 taught in the Agricultural College of North China University, and successively served as the director of the department of veterinary specialty and the director of the animal husbandry and veterinary education workstation; From 65438 to 0950, he was transferred to Beijing Agricultural University (now China Agricultural University) and served as director of teaching and research section, head of veterinary department, lecturer, associate professor and professor. He used to be vice-chairman and honorary chairman of China Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Society, vice-chairman of China Veterinary Medicine Code, head of China Chinese Medicine Group, editor-in-chief of China Veterinary Magazine, member of World Veterinary Society and consultant of China Agricultural History Society. In 2005 1 1.2, he died in the Third Hospital of Beijing Medical University.

Professor Yu Chuan is the founder of modern Chinese veterinary medicine in China. Since the 1940s, he has held high the banner of restoring and revitalizing the cause of Chinese medicine, united and recommended folk Chinese medicine, and collected and summarized the experience of diagnosis and treatment of Chinese medicine. 1956 initiated and established the Chinese Veterinary Medicine Group of the Chinese Society of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Medicine, edited the special materials and research reports of the Department of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Medicine in China, and served as the teaching director of Chinese Veterinary Medicine in Dingxian School of Chinese Veterinary Medicine (now College of Chinese Veterinary Medicine, Hebei Agricultural University). 1958 founded the first undergraduate major of Chinese veterinary medicine in the history of China. 1974 initiated the establishment of the national Chinese and western veterinary cooperation group and six cooperation zones, and presided over the joint printing of veterinary teaching materials in agricultural and forestry colleges for the first time. 1979 initiated the establishment of Chinese and Western Veterinary Research Society of China Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Society, and served as vice president and secretary general, and established the first master's degree in Chinese Veterinary Medicine in China as a tutor. 1979 and 1985 presided over the revision of the unified veterinary teaching materials in agricultural universities, namely the first and second editions. 199 1 edited the unified textbook of traditional Chinese medicine and veterinary medicine for undergraduates in national agricultural universities and undertook the compilation of basic theories and diagnostics of traditional Chinese medicine and veterinary medicine. Professor Yu Chuan is also the founder of Laser Veterinary. Since 1970s, he has been applying laser technology to the field of veterinary acupuncture. Together with his 14 graduate student (among whom 1 is a graduate student of pathophysiology trained in the 1960s), he has conducted a long-term and in-depth study on the biophysical characteristics of animal meridians and acupoints, and the results still rank among the top in the world.

Professor Yu Chuan is the founder of modern Chinese veterinary medicine in China, which not only means that he is the authority of veterinary medicine in modern scientific research, but also means that he is the authority of literature research on the history of veterinary medicine in China (the history of veterinary medicine in China). In the aspect of sorting out and excavating the ancient veterinary books in China, Professor Yu Chuan finally found the Ming edition of Yuan Heng Therapeutic Horse Collection on the basis of consulting a large number of historical documents and searching in many ways, and compiled and published the Annotation of Yuan Heng Therapeutic Horse Collection on this basis, which made the original appearance of the book reappear in the world. With his efforts, scattered folk books such as Niu Jing Qi Yao, Mario Ji and Chuanya Veterinary were sorted out and published. He also sorted out, reviewed, recommended and published some ancient veterinary books in China, such as Musian Jijijiaji Xuantong Lun, New Comprehensive Horse Prescription, Shiji Niu, Zhujing Daquan and so on. Professor Yu Chuan made a systematic study on the history of veterinary medicine in China. In the 1950s, he irrefutably proved that livestock castration appeared and was applied in Shang Dynasty in China (1600- 1046), instead of being first put forward by Aristotle (384-322), an ancient Greek scholar. Acupuncture originated in China, not Indian; Rectal examination was recorded as an invention of China as early as the Han Dynasty, not invented by Europeans and Americans in modern times and introduced to China. After 1980s, he not only continued to write veterinary historical materials in China, but also co-authored books such as A Brief History of Veterinary Medicine in China and A Brief History of Veterinary Medicine in China, which systematically and completely discussed the origin and development of veterinary medicine in China for the first time. On the occasion of Professor Chuan's 80th birthday in 2003, the Collected Works of Yuchuan (China Agricultural University Press, August 2003), edited by China Veterinary Branch of China Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Society and Department of Chinese Veterinary Medicine of China Agricultural University, was included in Professor Chuan's various papers and reports, with a total of 133 articles and 920,000 words, which were divided into three parts: veterinary historical materials (38 articles), monographs and academic activities. This book basically summarizes Professor Yu Chuan's academic achievements in his life.