Forest Of Stone Steles Museum
Once
the Temple of Confucius, the Forest
of Steles at Sanxuejie Street nearby
the South Gate in Xi'an was originally
built in Northern Song dynasty (1090
A.D.) when a large Confucian collection
of steles cut in A.D. 837 - the oldest
existing texts of the Confucian classics
- was moved here for safekeeping.
It gained the present name in the
18th century and boasted the largest
collection of its kind in China.
The contents of the Forest Steles
can be divided into four groups: works of
literature and philosophy, historical records,
calligraphy and pictorial stones.
One of the more striking exhibits
is the Forest of Steles, the heaviest collection
of books in the world with the earliest
of these more than 2,000 large engraved
stone tablets dates from the Han dynasty.
Most interesting includes an enlargement
to the Confucian Classics stone inscriptions
in the Tang dynasty. With the successive
collections of Steles in the Song, Jin,
Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties, it was gradually
renovated and expanded like a forest of
steles. The Popular Stele of Daiqin Nestorianism,
which can be recognizable by the small cross
at the tip and engraved in 781 A.D. marks
the opening of a Nestorian church. The Monk
Bu Kong Stele in Tang dynasty (A.D. 781)
is noteworthy for its Buddhist value.
Collections
here are also of high value for exploring
Chinese calligraphy history. Here
stand the many tablets engraved with
works of many outstanding calligraphers
through ages. Chinese calligraphy
boasts a long history in five basic
script forms, namely: seal script,
clerical script, regular script, running
script and cursive script. Through
more than 5,000 years of creative
work various forms have constituted
the abundant treasure and unique traditions
of Chinese calligraphy. The typical
includes the Cao Quan Stele, written
in Han clerical script famous for
its elegant, ingenious inscription;
The Tang dynasty witnessed the prosperous
period with noted distinctive styles
of regular script. The most distinguished
Tang stele is "the Preface to
the Holy Buddhist Scriptures"
in the handwriting of Wang Xizhi,
a famous Jin calligrapher. Some poems
of calligraphy are also collected
here.
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