Ute Engelhardt

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Ute Engelhardt (born January 31, 1956 in Mainz ) is a German sinologist and specialist author of numerous publications on traditional Chinese medicine .

Life

Ute Engelhardt studied Sinology , Japanology and Chinese art and archeology as well as the theoretical basics of Chinese medicine in Freiburg, Taiwan and Munich . Her master's thesis in 1981 was one of the first scientific papers in the western language on the subject of Taiji . In 1985 she did her doctorate on Qigong at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . She has been teaching there since 1988; since 2013 she has been a scientific lecturer for TCM at the Technical University of Munich . From 1977 on she was a student and assistant to the sinologist Manfred Porkert . Since 1978 she has also practically taught Taiji and Qigong. She has been Editor-in-Chief of the Chinese Medicine magazine since 1986 and Vice-President of the Societas Medicinae Sinensis (SMS) since 1996 .

In addition to her teaching activities, she conducts research in the fields of Daoism, Chinese lifestyle (yangsheng), dietetics , medicine, Qigong and Taiji . Her research work was funded by the German Research Foundation , among others .

Fonts

  • with Carl-Hermann Hempen : Chinese Dietetics (3rd edition) . Elsevier, Munich 2006, ISBN 3-541-11871-7 .
  • with G. Hildenbrand, C. Zumfelde-Hüneburg (eds.). Guide to Qigong. Urban & Fischer in Elsevier, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-437-56340-9 .
  • The classic tradition of Qi exercises (Qigong). 2nd Edition. Medical Literary Publishing Company, Uelzen 1997, ISBN 3-88136-185-5 .
  • Theory and Technique of Taiji Quan. WBV Biologische-Medizinische Verlagsgesellschaft, Schorndorf 1981, ISBN 3-921988-32-2 .
  • with Agnes Fatrai and Stefan Uhrig (eds.): Chinese medicine in ophthalmology. Urban & Fischer, Munich 2005, ISBN 3-437-56630-X .
  • with Michael Hoffmann and Agnes Fatrai (eds.): Chinese medicine in ear, nose and throat medicine. Urban & Fischer, Munich 2011, ISBN 978-3-437-57640-9 .

Individual evidence

  1. U. Engelhardt: The classical tradition of Qi exercises (Qigong). 2nd Edition. Medical Literary Publishing Company, Uelzen 1997, ISBN 3-88136-185-5 .
  2. ^ "Drug science and dietary manuscripts of the Dunhuang corpus" as part of the international project "Les manuscripts de Dunhuang et la médicine - médicine, religion et société dans la Chine médiévale" (2003-2010)