Celebrities
Bi Sheng
Every educated Chinese knows the name of Bi Sheng, who
invented movable-type printing, one of the four important inventions that
ancient China contributed to world civilization. Bi Sheng lived in Bianliang
(today's Kaifeng City), then capital of China in the Northern Song Dynasty
(960-1127). He used movable-type blocks for printing during the reign of Qingli
(1041-1048) by composing text by placing ceramic type side by side on an iron
plate, resulting in pieces of movable type.
Bi Sheng's feat is described in Meng Xi Bi Tan (Dream Stream Essays)
by Shen Kuo, an eminent scientist of the Song Dynasty (960-1279). Bi Sheng
started making clay types, one for each character. These were fired for
hardness. For typesetting a square sheet of iron was prepared with a layer of
resin, wax and paper ashes mixed and spread on it. The mixture was circumscribed
with an iron frame. A plate was complete when the frame was full. This was
heated over a fire until the mixture melted. The types meanwhile were pressed
down to the height of the frame with a wooden board and the plate was ready for
printing. For higher efficiency two iron sheets were used, one for fresh
typesetting and the other for printing, so that a new plate was ready before the
specified number of copies had been made from the previous one. Several
duplicate types were made for each character, the number depending on the
frequency of its use. As for rarely used characters, they were carved and fired
when necessary and used on the spot.
Bi Sheng's method had great merit in its notable speed compared with the
traditional process of plate engraving. Bi Sheng's invention revolutionized the
printing press and had far-reaching impact. About 400 years later, Gutenberge
invented the machine to make use of movable type in Germany.
Cai Lun
China was the first country in the world to make proper paper. Paper made
during the Western Han Dynasty (260BC-8AD) has been found in Gansu Province,
Xi'an City and other places in Shaanxi Province. A further development of paper
was credited to Cai Lun of the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220). Cai Lun as a eunuch
engaged in the study of papermaking during his stay in the imperial palace. He
used plant fiber such as tree bark, bits of rope, rags and worn-out fishnets as
raw materials. In 105AD, Cai Lun successfully invented the world's first batch
of paper. Cai presented it to the Han emperor, who was very delighted. In 114,
Cai Lun was given Longting Town as his domain; Cai was also called "Longting
Marquis". Hence, his invention was named "Marquis Cai's Paper". Unfortunately,
Cai Lun was forced to commit suicide due to conflicts in the imperial palace in
121.
Eastern Han Dynasty paper, found in Gansu Province in 1974, carried words
that were still clearly decipherable. Cai Lun's paper was one of the four great
inventions and has greatly contributed to the development of world civilization.
Cai Lun Paper Culture Museum, China's first museum of paper culture, has been
set up in Yangxian County in Northwest China's Shaanxi Province to show China's
papermaking culture. In memory of Cai Lun, the museum was built at his domain
Longting Town to mark his outstanding efforts in paper invention and papermaking
technique.
Feng Dao
Feng Dao (882-954) was the initiator of government-backed printing of
Confucian books on a large scale. He was respectively appointed as prime
minister of Hou Tang (923-934) and of Hou Jin (936-940) during the Five
Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period (907-960).
In 932, approved by the emperor, Feng Dao started to organize engraving of
Kai Cheng Shi Jing and block printing of Nine Classics in Kai
calligraphy (regular script). Nine Classics comprises of the Book
of Changes (Yi), Book of History (Shu), Book of Poems
(Shi), the Rites of Zhou (Zhou Li), the Rites of Etiquette and
Ceremonies (Yi Li), the Book of Rites (Li Ji) and three
commentaries on the Spring and Autumn Annals -- Master Zuo's
Commentary to the Spring and Autumns (Chunqiu Zuoshi Zhuan), Gongyang's
Commentary to the Spring and Autumns (Chunqiu Gongyang Zhuan),
Guliang's Commentary to the Spring and Autumns (Chunqiu Guliang Zhuan).
The printing work of the whole was completed in 953.
Confucian books printed by Feng Dao were widespread and had a far-reaching
impact at that time. It is a pity that the edition no longer exists today.
The Yu Family of Jian'an
The Yu Family of Jian'an was well known for printing in ancient China. They
lived in Jian'an County, Fujian Province. The family engaged themselves in
engravings one generation after another from the Northern Song Dynasty
(960-1127) to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
When it comes to the family's heirloom -- the Song Dynasty style block
printing, Yu Renzhong and his Wanjuan Printing House were the most famous and
their representative block-printed works included Chunqiu Gongyang Zhuan
Jiegu (a development study of Gongyang's Commentary to the Spring and
Autumns), Shangshu Jing Yi and the Book of Rites (Li Ji).
Another famous branch was the Qinyou Printing House managed by Yu Jing'an.
The Qinyou Printing House, named after its best manager Yu Qinyou, was further
developed in scale by Yu Zhi'an in the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368). Works engraved
by the Qinyou Printing House handed down included the Saga of Ancient Women
Martyrs (Gu Lie Nu Zhuan), Qian Jia Zhu Du Gong Bu Shi and
Tang Lu Shu Yi, etc.
The Yu family compiled many folktales, novels and essays with illustrations
such as the Saga of Different Kingdoms (Lie Guo Zhi), the Journey to
the West (Xi You Ji) and the Orthodox School of Poems (Shi Lin Zheng
Zong). Their works were well received at that time.
The Chen Family of Lin'an
The Chen Family of Lin'an (today's Hangzhou City) was a
well-known family engaged in printing business in the Southern Song Dynasty
(1127-1279). For Instance, Chen Qi run a printing house in Pengbei Street in
Lin'an, where a great variety of books were block-printed. His books were
regarded as outstanding representatives of printed works in the Song Dynasty
(960-1279), and some of them have been handed down such as A Collection of Poems
by Zhou He, A Collection of Poems by Wang Jian, A Collection of Poems by Zhu
Qingyu and A Collection of Poems by Madame Yu Xuanji. Chen Qi's sociability made
him establish close friendship with many poets, which did a lot of help to his
business. Chen Xuyun, son of Chen Qi, continued to operate his printing house.
Another example, Chen Si, also called Chen Daoren, once wrote Bao Ke Cong
Bian, Shu Yuan Jing Hua and Shu Xiao Shi. His printing house was also located in
Pengbei Street. Its famous printed work was A Collection of Celebrities in
the Song Dynasty (Liang Song Ming Xian Xiao Ji). Another printing house run
by the Chen family was located by the Wangu Bridge and it once bock-printed
books including A Collection of Poems by Prime Minister Li and Rong Zhai Sui Bi.
Mao Jin
Mao Jin (1599-1659) was a famous printer and a bookkeeper in
the late Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). He was also named Feng Bao when he was born
in Changshu (in today's Jiangsu Province). He took up bock printing and
bookkeeping at the age of 30 or so. He offered high prices for block-printed
editions of the Song and Yuan dynasties (960-1368) and altogether had a
collection of over 84,000 volumes.
Mao Jin hired many workers to print books. The most famous among his over 600
block-printed works included Annotation to The Thirteen Classics (Shi
San Jing Zhu Shu), The Seventeen Dynastic Histories (Shi Qi Shi),
Li's Annotation to Analects (Wen Xuan Li Zhu), Kuang Chuan Shu
Pa, Han Mo Chuan Shu and so on. Block-printing editions by Mao Jin
are the greatest in numbers among all the private printing workshops at that
time.
Wang Yunwu
Wang Yunwu (1888-1979) was a famous printer, compiler and educationist in
ancient China. He was born in Shanghai in July 1888 with a given name of Yunrui
and died in Taipei in August 1979. Self-taught, he only learned The
Three-Character Classic (San Zi Jing) and The Thousand-Character
Essay (Qian Zi Wen) in his childhood. At the age of 14, Wang Yunwu began to
serve as an apprenticeship in an ironware store in Shanghai while studying
English at a night school. He became an English teacher at 18. He later bought
an encyclopedia with 35 volumes, read it for two or three hours every day and
finished the whole book three years later. That is why Wang Yunwu had
encyclopedic knowledge though he had never been to a college or university. Wang
Yunwu served as a professor in National Cheng-chi University, Taiwan for 13
years and more than 100 students studying for a master's degree or a doctorate
under his supervision successfully graduated from the university.
Wang Yunwu was once invited to serve as a secretary to the then temporary
president after 1894. In 1913, he was appointed as a government official in the
Ministry of Education. Seven years later, Wang Yunwu worked with Shanghai
Commercial Press under the recommendation of his student Hu Shi. He was later
appointed as managing director. In 1946, he left the mainland for Taiwan and was
in charge of Taiwan Commercial Printing until he died in 1979.
The publishing of Wanyou Wenku, Daxue Congshu, Congshu
Jicheng, First Collection and other books organized by Wang Yunwu
has made the Commercial Press a publishing house with great contributions to
Chinese contemporary culture. Wang Yunwu was also an initiator of using modern
principles with the famed Four-Corner Classification System.
Wang Zhen
Wang Zhen was an agronomist and inventor of wooden movable
type. He was born in East China's Shandong Province in the Yuan Dynasty
(1271-1368). Wang Zhen served as an government official in Anhui and Jiangxi
provinces in succession. He engaged himself in the study of farming, mulberry,
maize and farming implements. Wang Zhen advocated that farmers should plant cash
crops such as mulberry, cotton and hemp. He taught farmers how to plant trees
and how to improve farming tools. In addition, he wrote the famous book Nong
Shu (Agricultural Treatise).
During the printing of Nong Shu, China's printing techniques saw
great progress and the greatest achievement was Wang Zhen's innovation in the
technology of wooden movable type. He hired people to carve movable wooden types
and then designed a revolving typesetting plate to store the movable types
according to the order of rhymes. He made use of this technique to typeset and
print books. Hence, efficiency of printing was greatly raised. Wooden movable
type was very popular in the Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1840).
The Hua Family of Xishan
The Hua Family of Xishan was noted for printing with copper movable type in
Xishan, Wuxi City, Jiangsu Province in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
Menorials of the Song Ministers was produced in the Huitong Printing
House set up by Hua Sui in 1490. It was the earliest Chinese book printed with
movable types extant today. In addition, the Huitong Printing House printed
Jinxiu Wanhua Gu in 1492, Rongzai Suibi in 1495 and
Jiujiing Yunlan in 1498.
Hua Sui's uncle printed Collected Works of Weinan with copper
movable types in 1502. The Lanxue Printing House, run by his nephew Hua Jian and
his son Hua Jing, composed and printed Collected Writings of Bai Shi Chang
Qing, Yiwen Leiju, Chunqiu Fanlu and so
on.
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