Towards the prosperous Tang Dynasty Interpretation of the national treasure, Han culture. The "orthodox" Han culture inherited in the south is the main source of the Tang civilization. After the Eastern Han Dynasty, after the establishment of the Three Kingdoms and the brief unification of the Western Jin Dynasty, Chinese history entered the era of long-term division of the Sixteen Kingdoms and the Northern and Southern Dynasties. At that time, the Xiongnu, Xian, Di and other ethnic minorities moved south one after another and came to dominate the north. The Eastern Jin Dynasty moved its capital to Nanjing, accelerating the development of the south. Soon, they were successively replaced by Song, Qi, Liang, Chen, and the Southern Dynasties in history. It began to exude the unique cultural connotation of the prosperous Tang Dynasty - Datang. Edit this paragraph The prosperous Tang in literature refers to the heyday of Tang poetry from Kaiyuan to Dali in the Tang Dynasty. Those who divide Tang poetry into phases are called the prosperous Tang, including famous poets Wang Wei, Meng Haoran, Li Bai, Du Fu, Gao Shi, Cen Shen, etc. From the Kaiyuan and Tianbao years of Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty, until the outbreak of the "An-Shi Rebellion", the Tang Dynasty was an era of highly prosperous society and a rich artistic atmosphere. After more than a hundred years of preparation and brewing, Tang poetry finally reached its peak of prosperity. Although the prosperous Tang Dynasty was the shortest among the four stages of early, prosperous, middle and late Tang poetry, its achievements were the most brilliant. During this period, not only the great poet Li Bai appeared, but also a large number of talented and outstanding poets emerged. Many poems that have been popular and widely recited for thousands of years were produced during this period. Enthusiastic, bold and unrestrained, with a strong romantic temperament are the main characteristics of the poetry of the prosperous Tang Dynasty; even the quiet and beautiful works are also full of vitality and brilliance. This is the "sound of the prosperous Tang Dynasty" that is envied by future generations. Poets in the prosperous Tang Dynasty were mainly divided into two schools: the landscape pastoral school and the frontier poetry school. The landscape pastoral school is headed by Wang Wei and Meng Haoran; the frontier poetry school is led by Wang Changling.