The origin of treasure:
Di Bao, also known as Di Bao (also known as Di Bao), also known as "Newspaper" and "Miscellaneous Newspaper", all use the word "newspaper", which shows that it is a kind of public news for notification and a news copy specially used by the court to spread documents and political information about Zheng Chao. According to historical records, both the county countries in the Han Dynasty and the buffer towns in the Tang Dynasty set up "stations" in Beijing, which are equivalent to news agencies stationed in Beijing today, focusing on transmitting news of state affairs. All imperial edicts, courtiers' meetings, and the appointment, removal and transfer of relevant officials are the contents that officials need to collect and copy. "Dibao" was originally copied by the imperial court and then posted at the palace gate for the public to copy, so it was also called "Gongmen Copy" and "Yuanmen Copy", which was actually the earliest way of news release.
About the Song Dynasty, there appeared a businessman who copied and sold Fu Bao for profit. To save trouble, officials are willing to spend some money on it. Probably come later, because you can buy it at cost, so you don't need to copy it. Therefore, in addition to official copying, there was Beijing Daily in the late Qing Dynasty. Beijing Daily has a special newspaper room management and operation, and has become a distribution department with a certain scale, taking shape. According to historical records, the cabinet of the Qing Dynasty had a special organization called "Copy Room" outside the Donghua Gate in Beijing. Every day, the newspaper sent people there to copy the news released that day, which was called "palace document", which was the place where the Qing government issued the "palace imperial edict" at that time. After the newspaper reporter got the manuscript, he printed it immediately in order to gain time. Except for all government affairs, dynamic reports and imperial edicts called "palace gate copy", the number of memorials was selected because of the large number. This kind of "newsprint" printed on a single page without a cover is called public copy, which is often sent out at night and sent to read. It is very similar to the current evening paper, and it is similar to the big reference of senior cadres, the nature and level of internal reference. Beijing Daily consists of three parts: palace gate copy, imperial edict and memorial. Because of the large number of words to be memorized, printing and binding are time-consuming, which needs to be completed in the evening and published the next day. This two-page printed Beijing Daily is very similar to the daily newspaper published now.