What people are familiar with is that Li Si changed Xiao Zhuan, and Li Si also appeared in this story as a calligrapher. Later, in the Qin and Han Dynasties, just like Cai Yong's Flying White Book, it was common in modern literary works.
Even from Lisi, the history of calligraphy in China began in 226 BC. Up to now, 20 1 1 this year is 2237.
This period is the time when calligraphy appeared. Many people confuse the time when characters appear with calligraphy, which is incorrect.
In 22 1 year BC (unified time), the Qin Dynasty was established, and Li Si led the unified writing, which was called Qin Zhuan in history, also known as Xiao Zhuan.
Later, Cheng Miao created official script on the basis of Xiao Zhuan. History is called Qin Li.
In 206 BC, the Han Dynasty was established, and the official script was valued by the emperors, and developed into a mature official script, known as Han Li in history. Chinese characters changed from seal script to official script. Since then, Chinese characters have not changed much, which is called official script change in history.
Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties were the pinnacle of calligraphy art, with Wang Xizhi as the representative in Jin Dynasty and 198 calligraphers.
The Sui and Tang Dynasties were the heyday of calligraphy art, and Tang Kai was represented by Ou Yangxun, Yan Zhenqing and Liu Gongquan.
Song Sijia, an innovative running script, appeared in Song Dynasty, namely Su Shi, Huang Tingjian, Mi Fei and Cai Xiang.
Zhao Ti in Zhao Mengfu in the Yuan Dynasty was called four books with Ou, Yan and Liu in the Tang Dynasty.
There are many calligraphers in Ming and Qing dynasties, and their calligraphy styles have developed.
I can't compete with manual copying. I tried to shrink the words here, but it was good ...)