Song dynasty AD960-1279

New Revised Imprint of Du Fu's Poetry with Annotations

Song dynasty AD960-1279

New Revised Imprint of Du Fu's Poetry with Annotations

32 x 22.3 cm (print: 22.9 x 17.8 cm)

Du Fu (712-770; Tang dynasty) with collected annotations by Tseng E and others of the Song dynasty
1225 Southern Song imprint by the Kwangtung Transport Supervisorate
 
Du Fu (712-770) was one of the greatest poets in Chinese history. Witnessing the An Lu-shan rebellion and the restoration of imperial rule in the mid-8th century, he lived through one of the most tumultuous periods of the Tang dynasty. Consequently, his poetry is filled with concern for the country and his opinions on life at the time. Due to his so-called "historical poetry," Du Fu has been acclaimed by later critics as the "Sage of Poetry."
 
Du Fu's collected works of poetry, according to a record in the "New History of the Tang," was originally composed of 60 chuan (chapters). However, with the fall of the Tang dynasty in 907 and the chaos of the Five Dynasties (907-960), much of it was lost. By the Song dynasty (960-1279), scholars were able to gather the surviving remnants and create a new edition. Owing to the difficulty in reading Du Fu's poems, various annotations were added to make them more easily understood. Various annotated imprints appeared throughout the Song dynasty and, in addition to the edition in the National Palace Museum's collection, six now survive. They range in date from 1059 to the early 13th century and attest to the popularity of Du Fu's poetry in the Song dynasty. "New Revised Imprint of Du Fu's Poetry with Annotations" was printed in 1225 by the Kwangtung Transport Supervisorate and first appears in the "T'ien-lu lin-lang shu-mu" imperial catalogue. In the Qing dynasty, it was originally in the Wu-ying Hall. In 1773, during the compilation of the "Ssu-k'u ch'uan-shu" (Complete Library of the Four Treasuries) collectanea, it was discovered to be a rare Song edition and chosen for inclusion therein. Unfortunately, it was destroyed in a great court fire of 1797. Another imprint was reported in the 18th-19th century in the collection of Huang P’i-lieh, but its whereabouts are unknown today. A partial imprint of chapters six to eleven was found in the 19th century and is now in the Seikaido collection in Japan. The National Palace Museum's imprint comes from the collection of Ch'u Shao-chi of Ch'ang-shu and is recorded in his catalogue.
 
This imprint was originally in the collection of Wang Shih-mou in Soochow, came into the possession of Mao Pao of Ch'ang-shu, and later Wang Shih-chung of Soochow. When Wang Shih-chung's collection was dispersed in the Tao-kuang era (1821-1850), it came into the hands of Ch'u Shao-chi. It was then purchased by the Shanghai merchant Shen Chung-t'ao and finally donated to the National Palace Museum in 1980.
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