Central Plains Rhyme is a northern drama rhyme written by Zhou Deqing in Yuan Dynasty, and it was written on 1324. The Central Plains Rhyme was originally written by a writer of Northern Music. However, based on the change and development of Northern Music since Liao and Jin Dynasties, it abandoned the division of Yin and Yang, and merged the old rhymes into 65,438+09, such as Dong Zhong, Jiangyang, Zhisi and Qiwei, which are close to today's Beijing Music.
The influence of phonological works in the Central Plains
Central Plains Rhyme is the earliest rhyme book in history, in which the related theories and creative methods are summarized from the reality of the Northern Opera at that time and according to the actual materials. Therefore, this book has a high authority in the history of China opera, and it has played a strong role in regulating the creation and singing of Beiqu, especially in the aspect of rhyme review, and future generations dare not even enter or leave.
On the phonology of Ji De, the founder of Ming Dynasty, even when northern music declined and southern music flourished, southern music books such as Fan Shanyong's Complete Rhyme of Zhongzhou, Wang Ying's A Compendium of Zhongzhou Rhyme and Zhou Shaoxia's Updating Zhongzhou Rhyme all inherited the compilation style of Zhongyuan Rhyme.