Xiao Se is a doctoral candidate at the University of Heidelberg in Germany. At the University of Heidelberg, the oldest university in Germany, the Department of Sinology is a young department affiliated with the School of Oriental Studies and Ancient Cultural Studies. Its ancient sinology major was established in the autumn and winter semester of 1962. According to the German university system, professors are the center of all teaching and administrative activities. The establishment of any department or major is marked by the establishment of professorships. The Chief Professor (Level C 4) is the ex-officio head of the department. The first chair professor of the Department of Sinology at Heidelberg University was Dr. Wolfgan Bauer (1930). The book "Chinese Views on Happiness", which he completed in 1971 and won him wide reputation, had been translated into Chinese and published several years ago. In 1966, Baowugang returned to the University of Munich where he received his doctorate as professor of Sinology. His successor was Professor Gunther Debon (1921). Debord is best known for his translations of classical Chinese poetry and the Tao Te Ching. He retired in 1986. Dr. R.G. Wagner (1941-) became the third chief professor of ancient sinology in 1987. Previously, he spent many years as a visiting researcher and guest lecturer at Harvard University and the University of California, Berkeley. His main studies" (1982), "Chinese Contemporary New Historical Dramas - Four Case Studies" (1990) and "Within the Service Industry - Research on Contemporary Chinese Literature" (1992), as well as the forthcoming "The Zhengshi Era" Linguistics, Philosophy and Politics: Wang Bi and Laozi"; the latter is the result of his 20-year special research, which made him well-known in the Western sinology circle as an expert on Wang Bi. In 1993, he was awarded the Leibniz Prize by the German Science Association. As the first sinologist to win this highest academic award in Germany, he also won honors and financial resources for Sinology at Heidelberg University. In 1986, Heidelberg University held a grand celebration of its 600th anniversary. One of the gifts given by the state government of Baden-Württemberg as the governing body of the university is a chair professorship in Modern Sinology. In 1989, Dr. Susanne Weigelin-Schwiedrzil (1955-), who won this new professorship, was the first German sinologist to teach modern Chinese studies as the content of her thesis, and was also the leading scholar in the field of German humanities at that time. Young female professor. She spent several years studying and doing research at Peking University and Tsinghua University. Her main research areas are 20th-century Chinese historiography, 20th-century Chinese literature, and the relationship between traditional Chinese thought and Western thought in modern China. She has gained a wide international reputation as an expert on the compilation of party history in China, represented by her works The Compilation of Party History in Contemporary China: Types, Methods, Themes and Functions (1984), and History and Theory: Research on Historical Methods in Contemporary China" (1988). In 1994, the Department of Sinology at Heidelberg University established a non-directorial professor position (Level C 3) in social and economic history, which was won by Barend J. Ter Haar, a Sinologist from the Netherlands (1958-). His main research areas are Chinese folk religions and secret societies, and he has written the relevant monograph "The Bailian Religion in the History of Chinese Religion" (1992). He has completed a new book, "The Society of Heaven and Earth: Facts and Myths," and is currently writing a book, "Cannibalism." So far, the Department of Sinology at Heidelberg University has become one of the few Sinology departments in Germany with three professorships. Since its establishment 34 years ago, the Department of Sinology at Heidelberg University has trained more than 20 PhDs and more than 100 masters, of whom at least 4 have served as Sinology professors in German universities. The Heidelberg East Asian Studies Series, which brings together the research results of Sinology, Japanology and East Asian Art at Heidelberg University, is quite influential in the Western sinology community. Professor Weigelin is one of the chief editors.