Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Guwen> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 32 of
32
with 100 items per page.
- Guwen abstract "Gǔwén (Chinese: 古文; Wade–Giles: Kuwen) literally means ancient Chinese script. Historically the term has been used in several different ways. The first usage, which is common, is as a reference to the most ancient forms of Chinese writing, namely the writing of the Shang and early Zhou dynasties, such as found on oracle bones, bronzes, or pottery. This usage can be found at least as early as Xu Shen's Han dynasty etymological dictionary Shuowen Jiezi (Shuowen for short).The second usage, also well known, refers to variant forms in Shuowen, which Xu Shen mistook as being ancient, but that were actually used in the eastern areas during the Warring States period, as exemplified by copies of the Zuo Zhuan and "books from within the walls" (those hidden during Qin Shihuang's book burning), which were available to Xu Shen at the time of the compilation of the Shuowen. Xu mistook these as being significantly earlier than seal script, and thus also called them guwen. That is, Xu used the term guwen to refer to two different groups of scripts, both those that were truly ancient (usage one above), and those he mistook as being ancient (eastern Warring States variant forms). It took the work of later scholars like Wang Guowei to separate and clarify Xu's ambiguous usage of the term.The third usage is for scripts that are no longer legible to the average modern reader, including the those referred to in meaning one above (oracle bones, Shang and early Zhou bronze and pottery inscriptions, and the Zhòuwén (籀文) from the Shizhoupian compendium (traditionally dated c. 800 BCE) as partially preserved through exemplars in Shuowen) as well as the Stone Drums of Qin of the late Spring and Autumn period, other writing of the later Zhou period preserved on stone, mid to late Zhou bronzes, the Eastern Warring States writing in meaning two above, and the seal script of the late Zhou to Qin dynasty. Qiu Xigui uses the term "ancient stage" of Chinese script in this manner, such that the Qin seal script and all its aforementioned predecessors are 'ancient', in contrast to the clerical script of the late Warring States through Qin and Han dynasty, and the standard (aka regular, or kaishu) script, as both of these are legible to the modern reader of Chinese.".
- Guwen wikiPageID "2458106".
- Guwen wikiPageRevisionID "604652251".
- Guwen c "古文".
- Guwen hasPhotoCollection Guwen.
- Guwen w "Kuwen".
- Guwen subject Category:History_of_the_Chinese_script.
- Guwen type Ability105616246.
- Guwen type Abstraction100002137.
- Guwen type ChineseCharacters.
- Guwen type Cognition100023271.
- Guwen type Creativity105624700.
- Guwen type FictionalCharacter109587565.
- Guwen type ImaginaryBeing109483738.
- Guwen type Imagination105625465.
- Guwen type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Guwen comment "Gǔwén (Chinese: 古文; Wade–Giles: Kuwen) literally means ancient Chinese script. Historically the term has been used in several different ways. The first usage, which is common, is as a reference to the most ancient forms of Chinese writing, namely the writing of the Shang and early Zhou dynasties, such as found on oracle bones, bronzes, or pottery.".
- Guwen label "Guwen".
- Guwen label "Guwen".
- Guwen label "Guwen".
- Guwen label "古文 (文字)".
- Guwen label "古文".
- Guwen sameAs Guwen.
- Guwen sameAs 古文.
- Guwen sameAs 고문_(서체).
- Guwen sameAs Guwen.
- Guwen sameAs m.07fhwq.
- Guwen sameAs Q645369.
- Guwen sameAs Q645369.
- Guwen sameAs Guwen.
- Guwen wasDerivedFrom Guwen?oldid=604652251.
- Guwen isPrimaryTopicOf Guwen.