Wang Xizhi's genealogy catalogue

This genealogy records the origin of the royal clan. Wang Xing began in the * * * and Zhou Dynasties (about 84 BC1-828 BC). After Zhou Pingwang acceded to the throne, he was promoted to King Jinyang of Taiyuan County, and his father and son were attacked. In the third generation, Wang was named Wang Daoxing, the ancestor of Wang. Wang family, prosperous and Jin Dynasty, declined in Ming Dynasty. From the beginning to the end, there were 170 officials in North Korea, including 66 in the Jin Dynasty. Famous figures include Wang Xiang, the Pacific Insurance of the Western Jin Dynasty, who ranks 24th in filial piety; Wang Dun and Wang Dao, the ministers of the Eastern Jin Dynasty and the leaders of the gentry who moved south, were called "the king and the horse * * * the world"; Wang Xizhi and Wang Xianzhi are calligraphers.

Wang Xizhi (303-36 1), a Han nationality with few words, was originally from Linyi (now Shandong) and later moved to Yin Shan (now Shaoxing, Zhejiang). He was a general of the Right Army and a great calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. He was honored as a "book saint" by later generations. His son Wang Xianzhi's calligraphy is also very good, and people call them two kings. Another son, Wang Ningzhi, right general, was called "Wang Youjun" and "Wang Huiji". Representative works include: Le Yi Lun in regular script, Huang Ting Jing, Seventeen Guas in cursive script, Gua for Aunt in Running Script, Gua for Quick Snow Clear, Gua for Mourning, Preface to Lanting in Running Script, etc. Intensive study of body posture, imitation of heart and pursuit of hand, learning from others' strengths, and casting in one furnace created a running script of "natural, rich in gods and the world", which was praised as "the sage of books" by later generations.

Wang Xizhi's Genealogy not only records Wang's life experience, but also records the distribution area of Wang's clan in the late Ming Dynasty in detail, which is a precious material for studying Wang Xizhi's family history.

Existing in the cultural center of Liangdang.