|
¡¡
 |
In museums of ancient history one often sees bamboo or
wood strips written with characters by the writing
brush. These slips are called ¡°Jian¡± in Chinese, the
earliest from of books in China. |
The practice of writing on slips began probably during
the Shang Dynasty (16th to 11th century B.C.) and lasted
till the Easter Han (AD 25 to 220), extending over a
period of 1,600 ¨C1,700 years. The Historical Records,
the first monumental general history written by the
great historian Sima Qian (140 B.C --?), consisting of
520,000 characters in 130 chapters and covering a period
of 3,000 years from the legendary Yellow Emperor to
Emperor Wudi of the Han, was written on slips. So were
other well-known works of ancient China, including the
Book of Songs (the earliest Chinese anthology of poems
and songs from 11th century to about 600 B.C.) and
Jiuzhang Suanshu (Mathematics in Nine Chapter compiled
in the 1st century A D, the earliest book on mathematics
in the country).
Excavations in 1972 in an ancient tomb o fthe Western
Han Dynasty (206 B.C. ---A.D. 24) at Yinque Mountain,
Linyi, Shangdong Province, brought ot light 4,924 bamboo
slips. They turned out to be hand written, though
incomplete, copies of two of China¡¯s earliest books on
military strategy and tactics: The Art of War By Sun Zi
and The Art of War by Sun Bin. The latter had been
missing for at least 1,400 years.
¡¡
 |
To write on bamboo
or wood slips was no easy task. Take bamboo
slips for example. Bamboos were fist cut into
sections and then into strips. These were dried
by fire to be drained of the moisture of the
natural plant to prevent from rotting and worm
eating in future. The finished bamboo slips run
from 20 to 70 cm in length.Judging from those
unearthed from ancient tombs, royal decrees and
statues were written on slips 68 cm long, texts
of the classics on 56-cm-long slips, and private
letters on 23-cm ones.The brush was used in
writing and, in case of mistakes,the wrong
characters |
would be scraped off by
means of a small knife to allow the correct ones to be
filled in. the knife played the same role as the rubber
eraser today.
Writing on bamboo or wood slips was done from top to
bottom, with each line comprising from 10 to at most 40
characters. To write a work of some length, one would
need thousands of slips. The written slips would then be
bound together with strips into a book. Some books were
so heavy that they had to be carried in carts. In some
cases the blank slips were first bound into books before
they were written on.
An unofficial story tells about Dongfang Suo (154 ¨C93
B.C.), a courtier and humorist, who wrote a
30,000-character memorial to the Western Han Emperor
Wudi, using more than 3,000 slips. These had to be
carried by two men to the audience hall.
Heavy and clumsy as they were, ancient books of bamboo
and wood played an important part in the dissemination
of know ledges in various fields. They were in
circulation over a long period until gradually replaced
by paper, which was invented in the Easter Han Dynasty (A.D
23 --220). |