File:Chinese woodcut; Play of the five creatures, 5 - The Bird Wellcome L0038961.jpg
原始檔案 (2,069 × 3,104 像素,檔案大小:2.55 MB,MIME 類型:image/jpeg)
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Chinese woodcut: Play of the five creatures, 5 - The Bird | |||
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標題 |
Chinese woodcut: Play of the five creatures, 5 - The Bird |
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描述 |
Wanshou danshu(The Cinnabar Book of Longevity) is a 'nourishing life' (yang sheng) text composed in the Ming period (1368-1644) by Gong Juzhong. It records a far more ancient practice known asWu qin xi(Play of the five creatures). This is a form of therapeutic gymnastics based on the mimesis of animal movements. Already described inHua Tuo Zhuan(The Book of Hua Tuo [?-203 CE])Hou han shu(History of the Later Han Dynasty), it probably represents a pre-Han popular tradition. This illustration depicts the fifth of the 'plays of the five creatures' -niao xi, the play of the bird. It is performed as follows: One holds one's breath, lowers one's head, clenches one's fists and adopts a stance like a tiger asserting its dominance, holding one's hands as though carrying a large amount of gold. Still without releasing the breath, one straightens up very gradually, then takes breath into the abdomen and allows the spiritual breath/Qi to rise and then redescend, so that a thunderous sound seems to come from the abdomen. This is done about seven or eight times. This sequence of movements is supposed to regulate the flow of Qi in the channels. Wellcome Images |
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https://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/obf_images/4a/84/aa0002170269c81b76f57c49806d.jpg
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目前 | 2014年10月13日 (一) 00:13 | 2,069 × 3,104(2.55 MB) | Fæ | =={{int:filedesc}}== {{Artwork |artist = |author = |title = Chinese woodcut: Play of the five creatures, 5 - The Bird |description = Wanshou danshu(The Cinnabar Book of Longevity) is a 'nourishing life' (yang... |
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簡稱 | L0038961 Chinese woodcut: Play of the five creatures, 5 - The Bi |
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作者 | Wellcome Library, London |
標題 | L0038961 Chinese woodcut: Play of the five creatures, 5 - The Bird |
版權所有人 | Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
影像標題 | L0038961 Chinese woodcut: Play of the five creatures, 5 - The Bird
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org Wanshou danshu (The Cinnabar Book of Longevity) is a 'nourishing life' (yang sheng) text composed in the Ming period (1368-1644) by Gong Juzhong. It records a far more ancient practice known as Wu qin xi (Play of the five creatures). This is a form of therapeutic gymnastics based on the mimesis of animal movements. Already described in Hua Tuo Zhuan (The Book of Hua Tuo [?-203 CE]) Hou han shu (History of the Later Han Dynasty), it probably represents a pre-Han popular tradition. This illustration depicts the fifth of the 'plays of the five creatures' - niao xi, the play of the bird. It is performed as follows: One holds one's breath, lowers one's head, clenches one's fists and adopts a stance like a tiger asserting its dominance, holding one's hands as though carrying a large amount of gold. Still without releasing the breath, one straightens up very gradually, then takes breath into the abdomen and allows the spiritual breath/Qi to rise and then redescend, so that a thunderous sound seems to come from the abdomen. This is done about seven or eight times. This sequence of movements is supposed to regulate the flow of Qi in the channels. Woodcut Library of Zhongguo zhongyi yanjiu yuan (China Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine) Wanshou danshu (The Cinnabar Book of Longevity) Gong Juzhong (Ming period, 1368-1644) Published: 1631 Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
IIM 版本 | 2 |