Content introduction
Zheng Daozhao (? -516), whose real name is Noble, is Mr. Zhong Yue, a famous calligrapher from Kaifeng, Xingyang, Northern Wei Dynasty, and the originator of Wei Bei. He used to be the secretariat of Gwangju (Laizhou in Han Dynasty).
Learn less and read more. Emperor Xiaowen of Wei became an official at the beginning, and served as a doctor, secretary of Cheng, assistant minister of Zhongshu, assistant minister of Zhongshu, tongzhi riding a regular waiter, imperial academy offering wine, secretary supervisor and Xingyang Chengzhong. During Yongping's reign, he served as the secretariat of Guangzhou and the general of Pingdong.
During his tenure, he was generous in government affairs, did not abuse torture, and took education and training talents as his responsibility, which won the hearts of the people. He is a laid-back man, who likes to travel and is good at poetry and calligraphy. There are many stone inscriptions in all parts of Gwangju, including 20 cliff carvings in Yunfeng Mountain in the south of the city, 0/5 in Daji Mountain in the east of the city and 8 in Tianzhu Mountain (now Pingdu).
Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, is the stage of development and change of Chinese characters from Han Li regular script. Zheng Daozhao, a masterpiece of Han Li, created a generation of calligraphy style with his deliberate innovation, round and vigorous brushwork, rigorous and broad structure, skillful and natural brushwork and magnificent charm.
Its representative figures, as "Zheng Wengong on the Monument" and "Zheng Wengong on the Monument" carved on Tianzhu Mountain and Yunfeng Mountain respectively, praised his father's wisdom and achievements and were praised as "the pole of Li Kai". In the Qing Dynasty, Bao's "Art Boat and Twin Towers" was praised as "a wonderful flower in the garden of literature", while Kang Youwei said that "the body is tall and elegant, and the density is good, such as raising people and whistling trees, and the sea guests are full of enthusiasm and unimaginable".
Jia Zhu called Zheng Daozhao and Wang Xizhi "sages of northern books", while Liu Haisu praised them as "a generation of literati".