Ling Fei Jing is the masterpiece of Zhong Shaojing, a famous calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, and it is also one of the lower case classics in the history of China calligraphy.
Zhong Shaojing, the word can be big, was born in Qianzhou (now Ganzhou, Jiangxi) (from Yingchuan, Shaojing Liyang Monument). Zhong Shaojing had a prosperous career. At first, he was a clerk of Sinong. Jing Longzhong (707-770 AD) worshipped China's calligraphy order and was made King of Yue. In the early years of Kaiyuan (AD 722), he was famous for his calligraphy and painting. In the fifteenth year of Kaiyuan (AD 727), he was at least an official, at the age of 80, and was famous for his collection and appreciation of calligraphy and painting. Xue Ji, a great calligrapher in the early Tang Dynasty, got the essence of Xue's calligraphy and became a family of his own. Zhong Shaojing is highly valued by Wuhou because of his skill in calligraphy. At that time, in front of the hall, Jiuding's inscription and the house numbers of each palace were written by him.
The original Ling Fei Jing was collected by Dong Qichang, a famous painter in Ming Dynasty, and was soon inscribed as the first volume by Chen Haining, Zhejiang Province. It was beautifully carved and pointillized, and was cherished by the world.