Kuiwen Pavilion was founded in the second year of Song Tianxi (A.D. 10 18) and named as the Library. Jin Zhangzong was renamed Kuiwen Pavilion in the second year of Ming Chang (A.D. 1 19 1), and Emperor Qianlong of Qing Dynasty re-inscribed the tablet. In ancient times, Kuixing was regarded as one of the twenty-eight lodgings, which was the main article. Later generations compared Confucius to the kuixing in the sky, hence the name. Kuiwenke is the place where the emperor gave books and received ink. Its unique architectural structure is also one of the famous pavilions in ancient China. Triple cornice, four-story bucket (wood * * *), dark layer sandwiched in the middle, laminated frame, upper column in the next bucket (wood * * * *). This structure is reasonable and firm.