Liang's Best Calligraphy Works

Copybook for calligraphy's representative works of Liang Shi official script include Ten Poems on Snow, Fa Tie in Sanxitang, Sunny Post in Snow, etc. Liang, 1697 to 1763, a native of Qiantang, Zhejiang, was an official and calligrapher in the Qing Dynasty.

At the age of five, Liang has the gift of four or five words of rhyme. He can recite and is good at literature. Together with six people, he has a monthly poetry club, and he has a collection of quality and Wei. At the age of 27, he studied at Wanjing Academy, where he was the dean and the right assistant minister and abbot of the Legal Department for four years. The following year, he was promoted to Zuo Assistant Minister.

In the eighth year of Yongzheng, he was a scholar, and served as assistant minister of the household department, minister of the household department and minister of the official department. After the Qing Dynasty entered the customs, Manchu occupied an advantageous position in politics, economy and law, and the flag-bearer was provided with food by the Qing court, becoming a class that earned nothing. Later, due to the extravagance and waste of standard-bearers, it became more and more difficult, and the expenses of standard-bearers became a big burden for the Qing court.

During the Yongzheng period, courtiers suggested that the flag-bearer and military and civilian immigrants in Kyoto area should be reclaimed outside the customs. Although Yong Zhengdi agreed to this measure, it has not been implemented so far. Liang was born in Yongzheng period of Qing Dynasty.

Later, because he was an assistant minister from the official to the household department and an imperial calligrapher in Qianlong, he liked to organize some semi-official calligraphy exchange activities, so he was dubbed the "Book Association Officer" in the Qing Dynasty. Liang's former residence was built in the late Qing Dynasty and belongs to Chinese residence. It was originally the private residence of Liang, a university student in Qing Dynasty, and was given by Emperor Qianlong.