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Jintan (Japanese medicine) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Jintan (Japanese medicine)
Jintan is the patented name of a popular Japanese medicine/candy developed by Morishita Hiroshi (1869-1943) and sold from the early twentieth century to today. Originally marketed as a cure-all for a number of ailments, Jintan is today thought of as a breath freshener only. Morishita Hiroshi was the eldest son of a priest at the Nunakuma-Shrine (, ''Numakuma jinja'') in Fukuyama (Hiroshima prefecture). After his father died, Morishita went to Osaka and started to develop pharmaceutical products. He was also a pioneer of Japanese advertising.〔Morishita Jintan 100nen kinenshi〕 Jintan has about 16 ingredients including cinnamon, mint, cumin, clove, and Fructus Amomi. The silver coated pellet-like pills were advertised from 1904 through the end of World War II. They were sold throughout Asia.〔(Jintan-advertisement for the Indian market )〕 The name Jintan combines the Confucian term ''jin'' (humaneness, benevolence) with the Daoist term ''tan'' (cinnabar, pills containing cinnabar, pills) evoking the notion of longevity and health. ==Packaging== During the Russo-Japanese War it was re-designed as a Meiji period soldier in court dress with bicorne.
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