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The Book of Sui is a catalogue of ancient Chinese historical records and one of the ten chronicles of the Book of Sui. The Book of Sui is one of the historical records of the five dynasties of Liang, Chen, Qi, Zhou, and Sui compiled by Wei Zheng and others from the fifteenth year of Zhenguan (641) to the first year of Xianqing (656). It is mainly compiled with reference to Sui Dynasty Liu's "Sui Daye Zheng Yushu Catalogue" and Liang Ruan Xiaoxu's "Seven Records".
The Book of Sui contains a total of 3,127 books and 36,708 volumes of four scriptures. In the annotations, 1,064 books and 12,759 volumes of books from the Liang Dynasty to the Sui Dynasty are attached, with a total of 4,191 books and 49,467 volumes. It is divided into 40 categories of scriptures, history, sub-books and collections, of which there are 10 categories such as Yi, poetry, calligraphy, rituals, music, spring and autumn, filial piety, Analects, proverbs, and primary schoolsThere are 13 categories in the Department of History, including official history, ancient history, miscellaneous history, hegemonic history, living notes, old affairs, official affairs, ritual notes, criminal law, miscellaneous biography, geography, genealogy, and bibliographiesThere are 14 categories of sub-sections, such as Confucianism, Taoism, Law, Name, Ink, Vertical and Horizontal, Miscellaneous, Agriculture, Soldier, Astronomy, Almanac, Five Elements, and Medical PrescriptionsThere are three types of collections: Chu Ci, special collections, and general collections.
Attached to the Taoist record, the Buddha record, the record of Taoist Buddhist literature. Each book records the title and number of volumes, and there are mostly brief annotations, indicating the author's era, title, authenticity and survival of the book's contents. It is preceded by a general preface outlining the development of book collections and catalogs.
Each department has a preface describing the academic genre of the school.
The Book of Sui and the Chronicles of the Sui Dynasty reflect the state of ancient books in China before the Tang Dynasty. Its classification system had a profound impact on later generations.
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Written by Tang Weizheng (580-643) and others. It is the second oldest existing historical catalogue in China after the "Hanshu Art and Literature Chronicles". This "Zhi" was originally the original manuscript of the "Five Dynasties Historical Records" during the Tang Zhenguan period, and was later incorporated into the "Book of Sui", which was based on Liu's "Sui Daye Zhengyu Bibliography" and referred to Ruan Xiaoxu's "Seven Records" classification system, using 14,466 Sui Dynasty testaments, 89,666 volumes and "Sui Daye Zhengyu Bibliography" to check, delete repetitions, according to the scriptures, history, children, It is a collection of four books and forty categories, which not only reflects the collection of books in the Sui Dynasty, but also records the changes in books in the Six Dynasties era, and finally establishes the status of the quadrangle in bibliography, and is also the oldest extant tetrachotomy catalogue.
It is worth noting that the "Sui Zhi" is attached to the two schools of Confucianism and Taoism after the four subsets of the classics and history, so it is not a complete four-part method, to be exact, it should be regarded as a six-part method. The scriptures and Confucian documents recorded in this "Chronicle", as well as the prefaces, small prefaces, and annotations, are still important materials for the general situation of Confucian writings before the Tang Dynasty. All in all, this is a catalogue of the subset classification of ancient scriptures and histories.
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The historical part of the Book of Sui has as many as 30 volumes, including 10 chronicles of etiquette, **, legal calendar, astronomy, five elements, food and goods, criminal law, hundred officials, geography, and scriptures. These 10 chronicles not only describe the canonical system of the Sui Dynasty, but also summarize the political and economic conditions of the Liang, Chen, Northern Qi, and Northern Zhou dynasties, and some even trace back to the Han and Wei dynasties.
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The classification method of the Sui Book and the Book of Records is () rock type.
a.Quartile.
b.Sextends.
c.Seven divisions.
d.Rule of nines.
Correct rough guess answer: a
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Categories: Humanities.
Problem description: I need to rub the narrative part of the Sui Book of Chronicles, and I don't know which part it is, does it refer to the large paragraph at the beginning of the Book of Sui Chronicles? Ask your enthusiastic friends to help you answer.
Analysis: Check the "Etymology": narration, same order. The book lists its outline as the frontispiece "Narrative". It can be seen that the meaning of a single "narrative" character is the same as that of "preface", and the position of the text is in front of the book.
Check the following entry "Narrative" again, the meaning is different: Narrative (2): When Emperor Cheng of the Han Dynasty, he ordered the Guanglu doctor Liu to pass on the poems of the sons to the Tibetan scriptures in the school.
Accordingly, the so-called "narrative" not only does not refer to the large paragraph at the beginning of the "Chronicles of the Classics," but also does not even refer to the narrative and discussion interspersed in it, but only refers to the bibliography including the title, the number of volumes, and the author.
In addition, you said that you need to "expand and crack the printing" of the narrative part of the Sui Book and Book Chronicles, and I think the word "rubbing" may also be used inappropriately. Because "rubbing" means to cover the rice paper on the metal or stone with engraved words or patterns, and then use a cotton ball dipped in ink to pat the method of making the slag lead reveal the calligraphy and painting, if not, it can only be photocopying or photocopying, and cannot be called "rubbing".
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Eighty-five volumes, five volumes of the Inner Emperor's Chronicles, thirty volumes of Chronicles, and fifty volumes of biography. The chronicles and biographies mainly record the history of 38 years from the first year of Emperor Wen of Sui (581) to the second year of Emperor Gong Yining (618).
The Book of Sui is an official history book after the establishment of the history museum system in the early Tang Dynasty. Chronicles, biographies, and chronicles were written by different authors. In the third year of Zhenguan of Taizong of the Tang Dynasty (629), Yan Shigu, Kong Yingda, Xu Jingzong and others compiled the "Book of Sui" biography, Wei Hui supervised it, and Zhenguan was completed in ten years.
The preface to the history of the Sui Dynasty is all written". Due to the division of Zhining, Li Chunfeng, Li Yanshou, Yan Shigu and others, the ten chapters of Zhi were supervised by Hu Dejun. In the third year of Yonghui (652) of Tang Gaozong, it was supervised by the eldest grandson Wuji, and it was completed in the first year of Xianqing (656), which lasted fifteen years.
The eldest grandson, Wuji, led the table, but he did not participate in the pre-compilation. The three chronicles of astronomy, the legal calendar, and the five elements were written by Li Chunfeng, and the geographical chronicles were written by Yan Shigu, and the other chronicles are no longer known to be written.
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Summary. Hello, dear, four short-answer questions (a total of 4 questions, a total of 40 points) 1Please briefly describe the development from +Qiluo to +Sui Book Chronicles+
From +Seven Strategies to +Book of Sui, the chronicles of the scriptures are the historical process of the collation of ancient Chinese scriptural literature. Among them, the Seven Strategies is a classification catalogue of scriptural literature written by Ban Gu in the late Western Han Dynasty, which has an important impact on the classification and sorting of ancient Chinese classics.
4. Short-answer questions (4 questions in total, 40 points in total) 1Please briefly describe what the development from +Qiluo to +Sui Shujingzhi+ illustrates (
Hello, dear, four short-answer questions (a total of 4 questions, a total of 40 points) 1Please briefly describe the development from +Qiluo to +Sui Shu Jingzhi+, which explains: "From +Qiluo" to "+Sui Shu" Jingshu is the historical process of collating ancient Chinese scriptural literature.
Among them, the "Seven Strategies" is a classification catalogue of scriptural literature written by Ban Gu in the late Western Han Dynasty, which has an important impact on the classification and collation of ancient Chinese classics.
"Cong" is a supplement and expansion of the "Seven Strategies", which supplements some deficiencies in the "Seven Strategies" and makes the classification of scriptures more perfect.
The Chronicles of the Classics is a bibliography of the classics compiled by the Confucian scholar of the Tang Dynasty, which adds new classification standards and bibliography on the basis of the Cong, making the classification of the entire scriptures more scientific and complete. The compilation of the Chronicles of the Classics marked a new height in the collation of ancient Chinese scriptures.
The Sui Shu Sun Rang Gao is a revised history of the Sui Dynasty officials, and the scriptures in it inherit the results of the predecessors, and further sort out and sort out the scriptures, so that the classification of the scriptures is more systematic and scientific.
This process illustrates the gradual improvement and development of the collation of ancient scriptures in China, and through the efforts of many people and generations, the classification and collation of ancient Chinese classics have reached a relatively systematic and complete level. This method of collation has had a profound impact on the later collation and research of classical literature, and has an important position in the history of Chinese scholarship.
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The Book of Sui is divided into five volumes of the Emperor's Chronicles, thirty volumes of Chronicles, and fifty volumes of Biography. Five volumes of the Book of Sui, two volumes of the Gaozu Chronicle, two volumes of the Emperor Yang Chronicle, and one volume of the Emperor Gong Chronicle.
There are 30 volumes of Chronicles, and 10 Chronicles have been written, including: 7 volumes of "Chronicles of Etiquette", 3 volumes of "Chronicles of the Law", "Chronicles of Astronomy", 2 volumes of "Chronicles of the Five Elements", 3 volumes of "Records of Hundred Officials" and "Chronicles of Geography", 1 volume of "Chronicles of Food and Goods", "Chronicles of Criminal Law", and 4 volumes of "Chronicles of Classics". Although the number of volumes only accounts for more than one-third of the Book of Sui, its weight is roughly equal to that of the Ji Chuan.
Although the Book of Sui was also written by many people, the authors were all knowledgeable and specialized, and most of them were people who participated in the re-revision of the Book of Jin and were responsible for writing the Book of Jin, and the value of the Book of Chronicles was very high.
The Book of Sui lists 50 volumes, and the catalogue lists 330 biographies. There are many good chapters, and some (such as the supplementary biography and some biographies in the quasi-biography) are made up, so the historiographical value of the historical events recorded in the biography of the Book of Sui and the documents contained in it should be treated differently. In terms of content, on the one hand, it emphasizes literature and Buddhism; On the other hand, it is important to pay attention to the official rank and the heavy weapon bureau (Juan:?).
Qiyu), feudal morality between relatives and officials.
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The Book of Sui consists of four volumes. In the Zhizhong, the scriptures are divided into four parts: classics, histories, children, and collections: the scriptures are Yi, Shu, poems, rites, music, Spring and Autumn, filial piety, and Analects.
There are 10 categories such as heretical theories and small characters, and the history part is 13 categories, such as official history, ancient history, miscellaneous history, hegemonic history, residence, old affairs, officials, rituals, criminal law, miscellaneous biography, geography, genealogy, and books; The sub-parts are fourteen categories, including Confucianism, Taoism, Law, Name, Ink, Vertical and Horizontal, Miscellaneous, Agriculture, Soldier, Astronomy, Almanac, Five Quotations, and Medical Prescriptions; The collection part is divided into three categories: Chu Ci, special collection, and general collection. Each of the four books records the title of the book, the number of volumes, the name of the author's official position, and the book of the dead. There are 3,127 books in the four books, and 36,708 volumes (including 4,191 books of the dead, and 49,467 volumes).
Each category is followed by a small preface, and each part is followed by a large preface. Generally speaking, the prefaces of the scriptures discuss the evolution of the scriptures, the prefaces of the history department discuss the development of the narrative style, the prefaces of the sub-sections comment on the shortcomings and lengths of each family, and the prefaces of the collection department describe the passage of literary styles. After the four parts, there are two records of Taoism and Buddha.
The Tao Sutra is divided into four categories, such as comma scriptures, bait, room, and runes, with 371 volumes and 1,216 volumes. Buddhist scriptures are divided into 11 categories, including Mahayana sutras, Hinayana sutras, miscellaneous sutras, miscellaneous sutras, Mahayana sutras, Hinayana sutras, miscellaneous sutras, Mahayana treatises, Hinayana sutras, miscellaneous sutras, and memoraries, with 1,950 books and 6,190 volumes. The Tao and the Buddha are recorded in two records, only the number of volumes of various parts is recorded, and there is no title or author of the book, but there is a large preface, which describes the origin of the Tao and the Buddha, and there is a round of post-paragraph commentary, discussing why the author "records its size and details, and attaches it to the rice of the four parts".