Waidan

E701751

Waidan is an early form of Chinese alchemy focused on compounding external elixirs and substances to attain longevity or immortality.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (51)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Chinese alchemy
Daoist practice
esoteric practice
longevity technique
associatedWith Neidan NERFINISHED
consequence deaths of some practitioners
contrastedWith Neidan NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin China
culture Chinese
etymology Chinese term meaning external elixir
field history of science
religious studies
focus compounding elixirs
external alchemy
manufacture of pills and potions
goal immortality
longevity
transcendence
influenced Chinese medicine
Chinese pharmacology
laboratory techniques in East Asia
language Chinese
method complex heating cycles
firing in alchemical furnaces
sealed crucibles and cauldrons
patron Chinese emperors
practicedBy Daoist adepts
court alchemists
relatedConcept external elixir
golden elixir
immortality drug
religiousTradition Daoism NERFINISHED
risk arsenic poisoning
heavy metal poisoning
mercury poisoning
textualSource Baopuzi NERFINISHED
Daoist alchemical texts
Daozang NERFINISHED
timePeriod Han dynasty NERFINISHED
Six Dynasties period NERFINISHED
Tang dynasty NERFINISHED
early imperial China NERFINISHED
uses animal products
cinnabar
gold
herbs
mercury
metals
minerals
realgar
silver

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Neidan relatedTo Waidan
Neidan contrastedWith Waidan