Hong Guang's Ming Ji Shanghai Ancient Books

It means: people have all kinds of virtues, and good moral cultivation is the foundation of people's life development.

From: [Jin Dynasty] Wei Chunqiu.

Wei Chunqiu is a 20-volume book written by historians in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. It describes the affairs of the Cao Wei regime during the Three Kingdoms period.

Twenty volumes of the original book have been lost. Some lost articles we can see today are preserved in Hongming Ji, Hongguangming Ji, Jinquanwen, Notes on the Three Kingdoms of Pei Songzhi and Shi Shuo Xin Yu.

Hongming Collection is a collection of Buddhist works. "A Tour of the Southern Dynasties" was written in the period, with volume 14. The preface of the book says: "Taoism is people-oriented, teaching is civilization-oriented, and Taoism is religion-oriented, so it is called Hongmingji."

Jinquanwen, one of the basic classics of China studies, was compiled by Yan Kejun, a philologist, bibliophile, Zhejiang Wucheng native and "literary master" in Qing Dynasty. Yan searched and collected the inscriptions on Jin Dynasty. * * * obtained the volume 167, which preserved many lost articles before the Tang Dynasty and made great contributions to the preservation and dissemination of ancient documents.

Extended data:

Sun Sheng wrote many works in his life, mainly Historical Records, and wrote ten poems and essays. His historical works can be found in twenty volumes of Wei Chunqiu, thirty-two volumes of Jinyangqiu, eight volumes of Wei Chunqiu and ten volumes of Collected Works.

However, Wei's Chunqiu and Qiu have long been lost. Today's lost articles are stored in Hongmingji, Guanghongmingji, Quan Jinwen, Notes on the Three Kingdoms of Pei Songzhi and Shi Shuo Xin Yu respectively.

Sun Sheng (year of birth and death unknown), the word Anguo. People from Zhongdu County, Taiyuan County (now Pingyao, Shanxi Province). Historians, celebrities and officials in the middle Jin Dynasty. Great-grandson of Cao Wei's title of generals in ancient times, grandson of Sun Chu, the satrap of Feng Yi in the Western Jin Dynasty.

Sun Sheng wrote a lot in his life. The Book of Jin called him "tireless in learning, and never let go from youth to old age." Most of his works are historiography, and his books are "straight and reasonable". He is the author of twenty volumes of Wei Chunqiu, eight volumes of Wei Chunqiu's Similarities and Differences, and thirty-two volumes of Jinyangqiu. Today, there are only anecdotes.