This article needs additional citations for
verification. (October 2021) |
孔憲紹博士伉儷中醫藥博物館 | |
![]() Dr. & Mrs. Hung Hin Shiu Museum of Chinese Medicine, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong. | |
Established | 14 December 2007 |
---|---|
Location | Ground Floor, Jockey Club School of Chinese Medicine Building, 7 Baptist University Road, Kowloon Tong |
Type | Private |
Website | Official website |
Dr & Mrs Hung Hin Shiu Museum of Chinese Medicine | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Traditional Chinese | 孔憲紹博士伉儷中醫藥博物館 | ||||||||
|
The Dr & Mrs Hung Hin Shiu Museum of Chinese Medicine is a privately run museum managed by the Department of Chinese Medicine at the Hong Kong Baptist University.
The museum was inaugurated on 14 December 2007. Funded through part of the HK$120 million endowment fund from Dr Hung Hin-shiu and his wife Yeung Pong-wah, who made their fortune through the real estate development firm of Shiu Pong Enterprises. [1]
In the museum a herbalist shop in the basement displays the tools and herbal, animal and mineral medicines that Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioners used, while other exhibits explore the importance of the “ spleen” in Chinese medicine and the evolution of midwifery in Hong Kong. [2] In 2021 the museum website stated that it is closed to the public until further notice. [3]
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (October 2021) |
孔憲紹博士伉儷中醫藥博物館 | |
![]() Dr. & Mrs. Hung Hin Shiu Museum of Chinese Medicine, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong. | |
Established | 14 December 2007 |
---|---|
Location | Ground Floor, Jockey Club School of Chinese Medicine Building, 7 Baptist University Road, Kowloon Tong |
Type | Private |
Website | Official website |
Dr & Mrs Hung Hin Shiu Museum of Chinese Medicine | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Traditional Chinese | 孔憲紹博士伉儷中醫藥博物館 | ||||||||
|
The Dr & Mrs Hung Hin Shiu Museum of Chinese Medicine is a privately run museum managed by the Department of Chinese Medicine at the Hong Kong Baptist University.
The museum was inaugurated on 14 December 2007. Funded through part of the HK$120 million endowment fund from Dr Hung Hin-shiu and his wife Yeung Pong-wah, who made their fortune through the real estate development firm of Shiu Pong Enterprises. [1]
In the museum a herbalist shop in the basement displays the tools and herbal, animal and mineral medicines that Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioners used, while other exhibits explore the importance of the “ spleen” in Chinese medicine and the evolution of midwifery in Hong Kong. [2] In 2021 the museum website stated that it is closed to the public until further notice. [3]