Efforts to simplify Chinese characters never
ceased during the development of the Chinese language. When it entered the
modern period, more efforts were put into this move and simplification of
characters became a new trend.
Educationist Lu Guikui became the first person
to advocate the use of simplified characters. He published an essay titled
Sutizi Should Be Employed in General Education in the Education Magazine
in 1909. After the May Fourth Movement, Qian Xuantong was the scholar who made
great contributions to simplification of Chinese characters. He came up with a
plan to reduce strokes of current characters together with Lu Ji, Li Jinxi and
Yang Shuda, suggesting using simplified characters in all regular written
materials. In 1932, the Education Department of that time released the list of
characters commonly in use.
In 1934, Qian Xuantong compiled the draft of
the Table of Simplified Characters, which included 2,400 characters. In
1935, the education department of the Nanjing government published the table of
the first batch simplified Chinese characters, which was significant to China's
educational development. During this period, many other works on simplified
characters were published, including Dictionary of Simplified Characters
and The Table of Simplified Characters.
After the founding of new China in 1949, the
government attached great importance to the simplification of Chinese
characters. In 1950, the Education Department of the central people's government
compiled the registration form of simplified characters in common use. In 1951,
the first batch of simplified Chinese characters was published, which included
555 characters. On January 31, 1956, China officially published The Plan for
Simplifying Chinese Characters on the People's Daily. In 1964, China
published The Glossary of Simplified Characters, which included 2,261
complicated characters and 2,235 simplified characters.