Miù Xīyōng 繆希雍 (zì Zhòngchún 仲醇, d. 1627, 明), late-Míng physician of Chángshú 常熟 (Jiāngsū). Biography in Míng shǐ Fāngjì zhuàn, appended to Lǐ Shízhēn’s. Tiān-qǐ-period Wáng Shàohuī’s 王紹徽 Diǎnjiàng lù 點將錄 — a polemical Eastern-Forest-Faction roster mapping 108 contemporary literati onto the Shuǐhǔ zhuàn 108-bandit list — assigns Miù to the role of “Divine Physician Ān Dàoquán” 神醫安道全, by reason of his medical excellence. Major works: Xiānxǐngzhāi guǎng bǐjì 先醒齋廣筆記 (KR3e0083, 4 juan, prefaced 1622) — a clinical compilation of Miù’s tested prescriptions and his cold-damage / warm-disease / epidemic treatment principles; Shénnóng běncǎo jīng shū 神農本草經疏 (KR3e0084, 30 juan) — a major commentary on the Shénnóng běncǎo jīng. Doctrinal stance: paired with Zhāng Jièbīn 張介賓 (Jǐngyuè) as the late-Míng Shānghán-and-internal-medicine school’s polar opposites — Zhāng warming-tonifying, Miù cooling-clearing — an opposition the SKQS editors compare to the Yìshuǐ vs. Héjiān schools of the JīnYuán period.