Da zhuan works

Qin bamboo slips of sleeping tiger land

The beauty of calligraphy displayed in Crouching Tiger Bamboo Slips is very unique, warm, luxurious, ethereal and clean with a pen, which reminds people of Hongyi's transcendental calligraphy.

The Qin bamboo slips of Shuihudi 1 12 The tombs of Shuihudi from Warring States to Qin Dynasty in Yunmeng City, Hubei Province were unearthed in February 1975. There are 1 155 bamboo slips (and 80 fragments) buried in the tomb. The contents are mainly laws, administrative documents and daily words. This bamboo slip has been buried underground for thousands of years, and the contents have not been passed down from generation to generation. To a great extent, it has retained its original appearance and has a strong authenticity, so many words have not been seen by future generations. A lexical study of these bamboo slips can provide useful materials for Chinese studies.

Although the Qin dynasty unified the official Chinese characters with seal script, it did not eliminate variant characters, and folk characters were also colorful. In the evolution of China characters, Qin Xiaozhuan inherited Dazhuan. Since Han Li, popular folk characters belong to natural evolution. The calligraphy of Sleeping Tiger Bamboo Slips can be classified as the natural evolution of Qin Li or Qin Zhuan. As can be seen from the glyph, there are quite a few glyphs in this simplified Chinese character, which are similar to the writing of Xiao Zhuan after reducing the convolution number; There is a slight sense of official script in the brushwork, and the horizontal painting of the characters in this simplified book has begun to show a kind of brushwork with a silkworm head and a swallow tail.

Mao-Ding Gong

The National Library has a holographic rubbings of Mao Dinggong, which was made by his master during the Tongzhi period of Xianfeng in Qing Dynasty. It is a precious holographic extension, with natural and realistic modeling and strong three-dimensional sense. Chen Huaisheng kept it in an old collection with the title of Luo Zhenyu's big seal on it.

Mao Dinggong, unearthed in Qishan County, Shaanxi Province at the end of Daoguang, has a total ear height of 53.8 cm and a diameter of 47.9 cm, and a ring pattern on his mouth. The inscription on the inner wall is 32 lines and 497 words, which is the longest bronze ware known at present. The inscription above records that in the early days of Zhou Xuanwang's reign, if he wanted to revitalize state affairs, he ordered Mao Gong to handle state affairs, and ordered Mao Gong and his family to serve as guards to defend the life of the Wangs and give them food, wine, clothes and weapons. Words and expressions are similar to Shangshu, and they are important historical materials reflecting the history of the late Western Zhou Dynasty. Since its discovery, it has been a heavy weapon of the country and has attracted the attention of all forces. In the second year of Xianfeng (1852), Su, an antique dealer in Xi 'an, bought this device one year and brought it to Beijing. At that time, Chen Jieqi happened to be working in Beijing, bought it with a lot of money and quietly shipped it back to wei county, Shandong. Because of his fear of treasure, he has been hiding his whereabouts and keeping secrets from others. In the period, Mao was hidden in the Chen family and gradually became known. Finally, the party bought it off with power. Since then, every number has changed hands. At the same time, American Simpson wanted to buy this country for $50,000, but China stopped him. In the Republic of China 14 (1925), Ye Gongchuo, the transportation chief of Beiyang government, secretly purchased this device. After the outbreak of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, the treasure was tossed about in troubled times and fell into the hands of the Japanese invaders. It once passed through Hong Kong and finally returned to Shanghai. It was purchased by Chen Yongren, a giant businessman in Shanghai, and donated to the National Government on 1946, and kept by the Central Museum. 1948, the Kuomintang retreated to Taiwan Province Province, and Mao He moved to Taipei, where he is now in the National Palace Museum.

San series board

"Shi San Pan" is a bronze inscription during the reign of Li Wang in the Western Zhou Dynasty. It was unearthed in Fengxiang, Shaanxi Province in the early years of Qianlong in the Qing Dynasty. Rubbings 13 lines ***375 words. Among the numerous bronze inscriptions, "Shi San Pan" is a very prominent representative.