Mì rén (honeyed person)

Mì rén (Hanzi: 蜜人, miren, "honeyed person"), frequently translated in English as mellified man, is an apocryphal medicinal preparation of human remains that have been embalmed in honey, an application found in the 1592 pharmacopeia Běncǎo Gāngmù (本草綱目, "Compendium of Materia Medica") by Li Shizhen (李時珍), who, in turn, attributed it to Tao Zongyi (陶宗儀), a scholar of the Yuan dynasty period, in the 1366 work Chuògēng lù (輟耕錄, "Talks while the Plough is Resting").

1366, Chuògēng lù (輟耕錄, "Talks while the Plough is Resting")

 * 木乃伊. 回回田地有年七十八歲老人，自願舍身濟眾者，絕不飲食，惟澡身啖蜜. 經月，便溺皆蜜，既死，國人殮以石棺，仍滿用蜜浸鐫志歲月於棺蓋，瘞之. 俟百年後，啟封，則蜜劑也. 凡人損折肢體，食少許，立愈. 雖彼中亦不多得，俗曰蜜人，番言木乃伊.

"Mùnǎiyī (Mummy)."

1592, Běncǎo Gāngmù (本草綱目, "Compendium of Materia Medica")

 * 按陶九成《輟耕錄》云︰天方國有人年七八十歲，願舍身濟眾者，絕不飲食，惟澡身啖蜜，經月便溺皆蜜. 既死，國人殮以石棺，仍滿用蜜浸之，鐫年月於棺，瘞之. 俟百年後起封，則成蜜劑. 遇人折傷肢體，服少許立愈. 雖彼中亦不多得，亦謂之蜜人. 陶氏所載如此，不知果有否？姑附卷末，以俟博識.

"According to Tao Zongyi (Táojiǔchéng, 陶九成)'s 'Talks while the Plough is Resting', in Arabia (Tianfang, 天方) there are men, seventy or eighty years old, that are willing to sacrifice their lives for others, and so take no food or drink, but only bathe in honey, dying after a month of this preparation. When they die, the sacrifice is placed in a sarcophagus that is filled with honey, inscribed with their year and month of death. After being sealed for a hundred years, the remains are then used as a medicinal honey. [As an example,] when someone breaks a limb, they take a small amount to effect a cure. Although scarce, it is popularly called miren (蜜人). [Tao] relates this, but I do not know whether it is really true? Regardless, I include it the end of this volume, for the knowledge of the learned."