Wang Xi calligraphy video

198 1 year, a peasant woman in Jiangsu is going to take out the soil as usual and prepare the materials for firing for the porcelain kiln. Who knows this pickaxe is not important? I found that there are five colors of soil under the loess, yellow, black, blue, red and white. She didn't know what was going on, so she quickly asked other people in the village. Some people immediately recognized this kind of soil, which was used to seal graves.

Immediately, thinking that there should be a cemetery here, farmers spontaneously reported to the local public security department that they had discovered the cemetery. After excavation by archaeologists, a sealed soil with a diameter of more than 60 meters and a height of 13 meters was gradually excavated. Then, sure enough, I found the door of the cemetery. It turns out that this is the place where the bones of the Eastern Han Dynasty governors were buried. After further textual research, through the cleaning of Guangling Wang Baoxi, relevant scholars concluded that the owner of the tomb was Liu Jing, the son of Emperor Guangwu of the Eastern Han Dynasty.

Historically, Liu Jing was dissatisfied with his mother brother Liu Zhuang's succession and wanted to be emperor himself. First, he pretended to be Guo Kuang under the Empress Dowager Guo and encouraged Liu Jiang, the son of the Guo family, to rebel. Fortunately, Liu Jiang is a conscientious C, who reported the matter directly to the Emperor Liu Zhuang. One plan failed and another was born. Later, they colluded with the Qiang people to rebel.

When the rebellion failed, Liu Jing found a warlock to examine himself and wondered if he could control the world like Emperor Guangwu. His sinister intentions are already obvious. However, the impatient warlord still failed to do so, and finally chose to commit suicide after being found out about witchcraft.

Although he was miserable before his death, he enjoyed all the sadness and glory after his death. After Liu Jing's death, many treasures were placed in his grave. Among these treasures, one has the most historical value, and that is Wang Xi in Guangling. Its birth immediately caused a shock in the Japanese archaeological community. Why is this?

1784, Hideyoshi and Xiping, who live in Shiga Island, Fukuoka City, met a big stone while widening the waterway. The two men had a hard time removing the stone, and they found a golden seal that read "Slave of King Han Wei". The news soon spread all over Fukuoka, and sinologist Kamei immediately wrote to two farmers and bought the golden seal with gold. Later, this golden seal passed through the hand of Kuroda and came to Fukuoka City Museum.

Since the discovery of the seal of slave king in Han dynasty, Japanese archaeologists have been arguing constantly. Some historians believe that China has always had a tradition of using interchangeable characters, and the entrusted characters are probably interchangeable characters of Japanese characters. The so-called entrusted slave owners are Japanese slave owners. The slave country is the name of Japan in the Book of the Later Han Dynasty, which records the history of the Eastern Han Dynasty in China. Because the Japanese were short at that time, they were called Japan or Japanese slave countries. Yin Wang, the slave king of the Han Dynasty, was the slave country doctor in the book of the later Han Dynasty. When he visited Emperor Guangwu of Han Dynasty in 56 AD, he won the title of Emperor Guangwu of Han Dynasty.

However, some Japanese archaeologists disagree that the gold seal of the slave king in Han Wei may also be forged. In their view, this power of attorney may not be a common word, but represents the meaning of appointment. The so-called appointment of slave owners is the appointment of a king of a slave country. In addition, according to their understanding, most of the titles given in the Eastern Han Dynasty were two-stage. For example, even if the Huns in the Han Dynasty were given a Japanese gold seal, the gold seal was written by a slave king in the Han Dynasty. Based on these inferences, these scholars questioned whether King Hanu's golden seal was a gift to Japan.

Scholars have been arguing endlessly, and people are still talking about the golden seal of the slave king of Han Wei. However, on the whole, in Japan, there are still many people who think that the gold seal of the slave king of Han Wei is forged. Why is this happening? This is because the emperors of the Han Dynasty only gave them gold seals when they rewarded countries that showed obedience and respect. If it is proved that Wang Yin, a slave of Han Dynasty, was the real Chinese seal given by Han Dynasty, wouldn't it prove that Japan surrendered to China in the Eastern Han Dynasty? This makes Japan, which once forced China to cede territory and pay reparations, burn, kill and plunder in China, and wholeheartedly prove itself to be a powerful country in East Asia, absolutely unwilling. Therefore, in Japan, the gold seal of the slave king of Han Wei has become a taboo topic in archaeology.

1956, archaeologists found a golden seal in the tomb of the Han and Dian kings in Shizhai, Jinning. This golden seal is owned by the King of Dian and given by Liu Che, the Emperor of the Han Dynasty, with the inscription "Wang Yin in Dian". This gold seal is 2.3 cm long and 2.2 cm high. This is very similar to the texture, font and size of the seal of Han Wei Slave King, with a side length of 2.3 cm and a height of about 2.2 cm.

Guangling Wang Yin, 198 1 unearthed, made of pure gold. The printed edge is 2.372 cm long, 2.375 cm wide, 2. 12 1 cm high, and the platform is 0.945 cm high. Its size and weight are very close to those of Wang Dian and Queen Han Wei. The appearance of Guangling Wang Xi once again played a supplementary role in proving the authenticity of the seal of the slave king in the Han Dynasty, which is why the Japanese archaeological community was shocked when this cultural relic was alive.

In addition, according to the regulations of the Han Dynasty, the buttons printed by neighboring countries are mostly snakes and other animals, and the buttons of King Dian and Han Wei Nu Wang Yin are all snake buttons. The turtle buckle is used on the seal of the internal imperial clan. According to careful observation, the characters printed by Wang Yin in Guangling and the slave owners in Han Wei are likely to come from the same craftsman. This is because the engraving methods of printed characters of these two companies are exactly the same as calligraphy, and they are all carved by the method of seal cutting.

As soon as Guangling Wang Yin was discovered, many Japanese archaeologists thought that King Hanu's golden seal was forged, which was immediately overturned. Japanese archaeologists who are unwilling to admit that Japan has surrendered to the Eastern Han Dynasty are also heartbroken. King Guangling didn't contribute to the Eastern Han Dynasty, but he didn't expect the cultural relics buried with him to play an important historical role after 1000 years. This is really amazing.

Picture/from the network, deleted.