- The (1406)
Jiuhuang bencao (Chinese: 救荒本草; pinyin:
Jiùhuāng běncǎo; Wade–Giles: Chiu-huang pen-ts'ao; lit. 'Famine
Relief Herbal'),
written by the Ming...
-
mountain ridge') – 4,007 m (13,146 ft), the
highest point on the road from
Jiuhuang Airport to
Huanglong Valley. Red Star Rock (红星岩)
Sigou (四沟; 'fourth gully')...
-
considered poverty food. Food
portal Government cheese Khubeza patties Jiuhuang Bencao, 1406
Chinese illustrated herbal for
famine foods Peasant foods...
-
chives are
blanched by
growing them in dark
environments these are
called jiǔhuáng (韭黄) or jiǔ cài huáng (韭菜黄),
known in
English as
yellow garlic chives....
- 1361 – 2
September 1425) was a
medical scientist, botanist,
author of
Jiuhuang Bencao, and a
prince of the Ming dynasty. He was the
fifth son of the Hongwu...
-
tradition of
eating this plant, and its
eating method is
recorded in the
Jiuhuang Bencao (Book of
Famine Relief Herbals). In German, it is
called the Sophien****...
-
Jiuzhai Huanglong Airport (IATA: JZH, ICAO: ZUJZ) is an
airport in
Songpan County,
Sichuan province, China. This
airport serves two
major scenic places...
- for the use of
medicinal herbs in
other traditions. ****anese star
anise Jiuhuang Bencao Kampo (traditional ****anese medicine) Li ****hen
Pharmacognosy Star...
-
Yanzhi in 1178. In 1406 Ming
dynasty prince Zhu Xiao (朱橚)
published the
Jiuhuang Bencao illustrated herbal for
famine foods. It
contained high
quality woodcuts...
- of Taoism,
including details of farming, the food
process and the diet.
Jiuhuang Bencao (Materia
Medica for the
Relief of Famine) 救荒本草 Zhu Su The book newly...