How to pronounce Zhong Ni Meng's Diantie?

pronounced as: zhòng ní? mèng diàn? tiè。

"Zhong Ni Meng Di Tie" is a paper-based calligraphy work created by Ou Yangxun, a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, and is now collected in Liaoning Provincial Museum. The interpretation begins with "Zhong Ni Meng Dian", which is seventy-eight characters. The words describe Confucius' dream Dian, which means Buddhism is impermanent and retribution. No stamp. Calligraphy is vigorous and simple, and the ink is light but not thick. It is written by Ou Yangxun in his later years, and it is a rare treasure. It is free to turn around, without any mistake or stagnation, with clear upper and lower veins, stable and solid structure, calm brushwork, smooth charm, square and round brushwork, charming and vigorous. It represents the pinnacle of Ou Yangxun's achievements in running script, and later generations are listed as one of the top ten famous posts handed down from ancient times in China.

About the author:

Ou Yangxun (557-641) was a calligrapher in the early Tang Dynasty. Tanzhou (now Changsha, Hunan) people, the official to the prince rate is even more. When I was young, I was brilliant, learned a lot about classics and history, and worked in calligraphy. The pen from the seal script, the rhyme from the Jin post, and the spirit from the Sui monument; Form a new body of "round and square" with vigorous brushwork and steep structure. "Pushing the rising and evolving model script, line script and cursive script to a new stage since the Jin Dynasty and the Southern and Northern Dynasties". Its reputation has spread far abroad, and it has been highly praised by bookstores in past dynasties. His inscriptions handed down from generation to generation include the Buddhist monk's pagoda inscription in Huadu Temple, Huangfu Birthday Monument, and Jiucheng Palace's Liquan inscription, with ink marks such as Hans Zhang's post, Bo Shang's post (Tang Kuo's Fill-in), Thousand-character essay post and Zhong Ni Meng Di Tie.