Fu Zengxiang (1872 ~ 1949), Yu Runyuan, Uncle Yuan, alias Tibetan Garden Old Man, Tibetan Garden Lay Man, Qingquan Yishou, etc. They are all from Luzhou, Sichuan. Modern scholars. He was a scholar in Guangxu period, and Jishi Shu was admitted to imperial academy on 1898. After the failure of the Reform Movement of 1898, six gentlemen were martyred and wrote articles to defend them. Tang delegation to the peace talks during the Revolution of 1911. 19 17 joined the cabinet of Wang Shizhen as the chief education officer. During the May 4th Movement, he was dismissed for resisting Beijing's order to recall Cai Yuanpei. From 65438 to 0927, he was the director of the library of the Palace Museum. 1949, Zhou Enlai sent Chen Yi to visit his family with a letter, but he died before he arrived. He is the author of Rare Bibliography of Shuangjianlou, Collection Continuation of Shuangjianlou and Miscellaneous Poems of Shuangjianlou.
The main study number is: Shuangjian Building.
Fu's ancestors left a meta-magazine Zi Zhu in Shuangjianlou. 19 16, Fu Zengxiang purchased the biannual issue of Zi Tong Zhi Jian from Qiangfang. He is very fond of these two Song and Yuan editions, calling them "Double Sword" and naming his study "Double Sword House".
1928 In the early spring, a bookseller was selling Hong Jian written by the court in the Southern Song Dynasty. When Fu saw this book, he was like an old friend. It turns out that more than ten years ago, he read this book in Yu Sheng, the imperial clan of the Qing Dynasty, and knew it was the only and most complete book left by the imperial palace of the Southern Song Dynasty. His calligraphy is vigorous and powerful, with the style of writing classics in the Tang Dynasty, such as mulberry jade edition, Yuquan bamboo column and jade seal, which are really rare treasures. From the Song Dynasty to the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China, it was kept in the palace until the early Republic of China, when it fell into the hands of Yu Sheng. At that time, Fu was envious and dreamed of it for more than ten years. Now that this book has fallen from the sky, it is of course overjoyed. However, the bookseller charged a high price, so Fu resolutely sold his three volumes of Japanese and Korean ancient prints and exchanged them for this book. It's really "taking bear's paw instead of fish." Since then, one of his "double mirrors" is no longer Zhu, but Hong Jian in the Southern Song Dynasty. He also claimed to be "the owner of the two buildings".
Fu Zengxiang loved reading all his life, claiming to be "like ants gathering together, moths to the fire". More obsessed with school books, Ceng Yun said in "After the Books of Wenyuan Huaying School": "Alone in the fate of ancient books and school books, my love for goodness is deep, as if I were born with it, like clothes in the cold and food in the hunger, as if I would never leave for a day." In Shuangjian Building, he made a rule that he should proofread 30 pages of books every day. If he can't finish it during the day, he will have to burn the midnight oil. Sometimes his family saw that it was past midnight and urged him to rest several times before he left the study.
Shuangjianlou has a rich collection of books, including about 50 kinds of Song and Jin editions/KLOC-0, dozens of Yuan editions, and more refined editions, famous banknotes and masterpieces of the Ming and Qing Dynasties, totaling more than 200,000 volumes. When he was seriously ill, he asked his family to donate his books to his hometown Sichuan University, the "double mirror" of the treasure of the town room, and then to the Beijing Library. According to the bibliography of Beijing Library, there are 280 kinds of Fu Shanben. Fu wrote a lot of works before his death, and only the rare edition of Shuangjianlou, the sequel of Shuangjianlou and the miscellaneous poems of Shuangjianlou were named after his study.
Owner of Shuangjian Building
Shuangjianlou Library Printing