Who wrote Siku Quanshu and when?
The editor-in-chief of Sikuquanshu is Ji Jun (1724 ~ 1805), whose real name is Xiao Lan, whose real name is Chun Fan, and whose real name is Shi Yun, who was born in xian county, Zhili (now Hebei). Qing officials, bibliographers and writers. Qianlong Jinshi, official to the history of the Ministry of rites, co-organizer of the university. Gan is the editor-in-chief of Sikuquanshu, and presided over the compilation of the General Catalogue of Sikuquanshu and the Concise Catalogue. He died in Vinda. He is the author of Yuewei Caotang Notes and Ji Wenda's Public Heritage Collection. Sikuquanshu is a large-scale encyclopedia series compiled by the most accomplished scholars in various disciplines organized by the court in the middle of Qianlong period of Qing Dynasty. It has collected more than 3,400 kinds of books, divided into four subsets: classics and history, and collected important works of previous dynasties before Qianlong, basically including excellent classics of various disciplines up to that time. Editor-in-chief Ji Xiaolan and 360 scholars from different disciplines participated in the editing work. It took 65,438+00 years, and the first set of Sikuquanshu was completed in the forty-sixth year of Qianlong (65,438+07,865,438+0), and it was kept in the Wen Yuan Pavilion of the Forbidden City. By the fifty-second year of Qianlong (1787), six sets of complete books had been completed, which were stored in Wenshui Pavilion of the Forbidden City in Fengtian (now Shenyang), Wenyuan Pavilion of Yuanmingyuan in the suburbs of Beijing, Jinwen Pavilion in chengde mountain resort, Wenhui Pavilion of Daguantang in Yangzhou, Wenzong Pavilion of Jinshan Temple in Zhenjiang and Wen Lan Pavilion of Shengyin Temple in Hangzhou. In the past 200 years, three of the seven sets of Sikuquanshu have survived the war, namely, the Jinwen Pavilion in Beijing, the Wenshui Pavilion in Lanzhou and the Wen Yuan Pavilion in Taipei. Wen Yuan Pavilion, Wenzong Pavilion and Wen Hui Pavilion were all destroyed, while Wen Lan Pavilion was not completely damaged. The officials of Siku Library are contemptuous of China's traditional operas and novels, but they chose to include them in this renewal, which is a pioneering work.