Tashiro Sanki 田代三喜 (Chinese: Tiándài Sānxǐ, 1465–1544), late-Muromachi / Sengoku-period Japanese physician. Conventionally regarded as the founder of the Japanese reception of the JīnYuán-school doctrine: he travelled to Míng China in his youth, where he studied under disciples of Lǐ Gǎo 李杲 and Zhū Zhènhēng 朱震亨, and on his return to Japan transmitted the píwèi (spleen-stomach) doctrine and the yǎngyīn (yin-nourishing) doctrine that became the basis of the Japanese Goseihō 後世派 (Later-Period School) of medicine. His leading disciple was 曲直瀨道三 Manase Dōsan, founder of the Manase line and author of the Yàoxìng néngdú 藥性能毒 (KR3ec076). Japanese physician; not in CBDB.