Famous doctors in the Qing Dynasty include: Xu Siwen, Li Maosheng, Wang Sanzhu, Ye Tianshi, Xue Shengbai, etc.
1. Xu Siwen
Xu Siwen, from Tongzhi to Guangxu years in the Qing Dynasty, was a native of Xucun, Shebei. He read Xuanhuang's book when he was young, inherited his family legacy, and determined to help the world. After adulthood, he practiced medicine in Changhuai for a long time. He was a famous doctor who could bring patients infected with cholera back to life.
2. Li Maosheng
Li Ehua (1722-1795), formerly known as Li Maosheng, was a native of Lijiaganzhuang, Hou Town, Shouguang, Shandong, and later settled in Jiuxiang, Shouguang. Born in the late Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty, he had no intention of pursuing an official career since childhood and was determined to benefit the people. Following his father, he studied Qihuang's techniques intensively and developed superb medical skills, especially surgery. What is particularly admirable is his noble medical ethics and his reputation among the people.
Mr. Li Ehua practiced medicine among the people with his noble medical ethics and exquisite medical skills. He saved countless sick and wounded patients who were on the verge of death. Therefore, his name has been immortalized through the ages. People still miss him and respect him as a god. They offer sacrifices to generations and hold incense. Continuously.
Li Ehua once wrote a volume of "Clinical Prescriptions" during his lifetime, which was copied from all over the world and reached as far away as neighboring counties. Unfortunately, it has been lost now.
3. Ye Tianshi
Ye Gui (1666 AD to 1745 AD), nicknamed Tianshi, nicknamed Xiangyan, and Mr. Nanyang. A native of Wuxian County, Jiangsu Province (now Suzhou, Jiangsu Province). Ye Gui was a famous medical scientist in the Qing Dynasty and one of the four major febrile disease experts.
Ye Gui was originally from She County, Anhui Province. His great ancestor Ye Fengshan moved to Suzhou from Lantian Village, She County, Anhui Province, and lived by the Shangjin Bridge. Therefore, Ye Gui was also called Shangjin Old Man in his later years.
4. Xue Shengbai
Xue Shengbai, also known as Xue; A native of Wuxian County in the Qing Dynasty, he was born in the 20th year of Kangxi's reign in the Qing Dynasty (1681) and died in the 35th year of Qianlong's reign in the Qing Dynasty (1770) at the age of 90. He is as famous as Ye Tianshi at the same time. In his early years, he traveled to the sect of the famous Confucian Ye Xie. He was good at poetry and prose. He was also good at calligraphy and painting, and was good at boxing skills. Later, because his mother suffered from damp-heat disease, he devoted himself to medicine and perfected his skills day by day. Xue Xue lived a life of heroism and indifference. He died at the age of ninety.
Therefore, we also know that Xue Shengbai was not a professional doctor, but he was a master in the treatment of damp-heat syndrome. His book "Dampness-heat Treatise" has become a masterpiece handed down from generation to generation, and he has made great contributions to the study of febrile diseases. He also tried to select and compile the original text of the "Nei Jing" into six volumes of "The Original Purpose of the Medical Classic" (1754). Tang Dali's "Wu Yihui Lectures" records eight of his "Miscellaneous Notes on Daily Lectures", expounding medical theory and medication; there are also "Gao Wan Guan Zi" (special issue manuscript), "Shang Ke Fang", "Xue Yi Lao Treatise on Malaria" (copy), etc.
5. Wang Sanzhu
Wang Sanzhu (1798-1882), courtesy name Daoxin and nickname Zhenyizi, was a native of Zhenlezhuang, Kongjiaya, Anning District. A famous doctor and poet in Lanzhou during the Qing Dynasty.
He became a scholar at the age of 13 and was familiar with the Four Books and Five Classics. After that, he gave up his career and turned to medicine and made a living by practicing medicine. He was a generous man who valued loyalty over property. He had noble medical ethics and was not thanked for his treatment. He was respected as a parent by his fellow villagers.
Wang is not only a famous Chinese medicine doctor, but also a poet and calligrapher who loves his motherland and hometown. He has written several volumes such as "Dayatang Poems" and "Fangfang Ji".
He believed in Neo-Confucianism throughout his life, valued rationality, advocated the "correct learning" of Confucius and Mencius, and based on "benevolence". He lived in poverty all his life, was upright, did not seek power, was diligent in writing, had excellent medical skills and noble medical ethics, and was highly praised by future generations.
References Baidu Encyclopedia-Xue Shengbai
Baidu Encyclopedia-Ye Tianshi
Baidu Encyclopedia-Wang Sanzhu
Baidu Encyclopedia-Li Maosheng
Baidu Encyclopedia-Xu Siwen