Chunhua Pavilion Post is the earliest calligraphy post in China. In the third year of Song Chunhua (992), Emperor Taizong Zhao Xuan ordered Gu Mo collected by the Imperial Palace to be copied by Hanlin official Wang Zhu in the forbidden area, and named it Chunhua Pavilion Post, also known as Chunhua Secret Pavilion Law Post, referred to as Pavilion Post. This is a collection of ten volumes.
It contains China's calligraphy ink from pre-Qin to Sui and Tang Dynasties 1000 years, including 420 works by emperors, courtiers and famous calligraphers 103 people, and is praised by later generations as the crown of calligraphy posts in China and the "ancestor of cluster posts".
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Chunhua Pavilion Post is the earliest calligraphy post in China. The first volume contains the calligraphy works of 65,438+09 emperors from Emperor Zhang of Han Dynasty to Tang Dynasty, including Dong's Tomb Post, Sima Yue's Lu Nv Post and Sima Pi's Zhong Shu Post.
Song Tuo's rare books handed down from generation to generation are: Song Tuo's Ten Volumes of Quanzhou Chunhua Pavilion (collected by Yuan's family in Suiyang), Ten Volumes of Quanzhou Chunhua Pavilion in China History Museum, and Song Tuo's Book of Quanzhou Chunhua Pavilion in the Chinese University of Hong Kong (Volumes 6, 7 and 8).
The third year of Chunhua (992) is an important node in the history of calligraphy in China, which dominated the development direction of calligraphy in China. The publication of Chunhua Pavilion Post finally established Wang Xizhi's position as a "book saint". "Spring Flower Pavilion Post" opened the end of official engraving, thus setting off the wind of official private engraving. Now most of Song Tuojia's books have been photocopied and published, which reproduces the true colors of Ge Tie.
On March 20 19, the Ming dynasty rubbings "Chunhua Pavilion Post" appeared in the 53rd Spring Festival auction of Guardian Four Seasons.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Chunhua Pavilion Post