The so-called three major books of China's traditional Mongolian studies are Sanzi Jing, Qianzi Wen and Hundred Family Names.
1. The Three-Character Classic
There is no exact author of the book, which is rumored to be compiled by Wang Yingli in the Southern Song Dynasty. In the Qing Dynasty, He Xingsi recorded in the Annotations to the Three-Character Classics that "when the Three-Character Classics of Song Ru Wang Bohou came out, the children at home and abroad were blinded by Xian Gong." But it needs to be studied.
among the three major books of China's traditional enlightenment, San Zi Jing is the most simple and easy to understand. It is concise and uses typical materials, including literature, history, philosophy, astronomy and geography, ethics and justice, loyalty and filial piety, and so on.
2. Qianziwen
Qianziwen, the full name of the book of Wang Xizhi, was written in the Southern and Northern Dynasties. Originally, Xiao Yan of Liang Wudi ordered Zhou Xingsi to print Wang Xizhi's calligraphy works for the calligraphy study of kings, and selected 1 non-repetitive fonts to compile them.
Qian Zi Wen begins with "Heaven and Earth are mysterious and yellow, and the universe is vast". The whole text has no repeated fonts, and it is well organized and neat, including astronomy, society, history, ethics, education and other knowledge.
3. Hundred Surnames
Hundred Surnames is a traditional enlightenment book about surnames in China, which became the Northern Song Dynasty. It was compiled by a scholar in Qiantang, whose specific name is unknown.
Hundred Surnames does not refer to 1 Chinese surnames. The original book collected 411 surnames, which were later supplemented to 568, including 444 single surnames and 124 compound surnames.