The English names are herb of short horned epi medium, herb of sagitta te epi medium, herb of published epi medium, herb of Korean epi medium and epi medium herb.
Another name
Gang Qian, Herba Epimedii, Herba Epimedii, Rhizoma Coptidis, Herba Lysimachiae, Herba Lysimachiae, Clover, Guiyu, Tiehuakou, Tielakou, Carassius auratus, Herba Epimedii, Elaeagnus cornuta, Triangular Lotus, Anemone, Thousand taels of gold, dried chicken tendon, Herba Paederiae, Tripterygium Wilfordii, cornflower and copper wire grass. Medicinal materials: stems and leaves of Berberidaceae such as Epimedium, Epimedium Epimedium, Epimedium sagittatum, Epimedium Wushan, Epimedium koreanum and Epimedium pubescens.
Latin animal and plant mineral name: 1. The largest epimedium. 2. Epimedium sagittatum. 3. Epimedium Wushan. 4. Epimedium Korea Nakai. 5. Epimedium pilosum.
Harvesting and storage: harvesting in summer and autumn, cutting stems and leaves, removing impurities and drying in the sun. From Shennong's Herbal Classic.
1. Materia Medica: Epimedium is produced in Jiangdong, Shaanxi, Taishan, Hanzhong, Huguang and Hunan. Julia is like an apricot leaf full of thorns. The stem is like a millet stem. The root is purple and has a beard. Flowers bloom in April, white and with small purple heads. Leaves are picked and dried in May. Hunan comes out with leaves like adzuki beans, slender branches and stems, and roots like coptis chinensis after winter. Guanzhong Valley calls for three nine-leaf grasses, the seedlings are one or two feet high, and the roots and leaves are comparable.
2. "Outline": Epimedium, born in the deep mountains, has several stems, the stems are as thick as lines, one or two feet high, one stem has three branches, one branch has three leaves, and the leaves are two or three inches long, such as apricot leaves and
Epimedium (Classic)
Different names are just before (classic), Herba Epimedii (theory of Lei Gong's baking), Herba Epimedii (collection of Liu Liuzhou), cauliflower, abandoned grass, thousand taels of gold, dried chicken tendon, Huanglianzu (Japanese herbal medicine), three branches of nine-leaf grass (herbal medicine), cornus flower and copper wire.