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China, US Start 4th Round of Textile
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Active Summer for Shanghai Elderly
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Cola Bottle Clothes to Save Environment at
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Trade Negotiations Not Zero-sum
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Long Road to Government Reform
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US Copter Under Fire in Iraq;
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Actions Initiated by the All-China
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NPC Revises Securities Law,
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Romans in China Stir up Controversy
NPC Revises Securities Law
48 Confirmed Dead in Peru Air
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Banner of Diplomacy Stressed
WWII Veteran's Reminiscent Journey
Back to China
Corruption Has to Stay Capital
Crime
Nurturing the Art of Tea
Art Class Tailored for Poverty-stricken
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Police Appeal After Uni Break-in
Students Get Close-up Views of
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Israel Kicks off Pullout
Guangdong Air Quality Takes Turn
for Better
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Proposed Surveillance Bill to
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from Government
Second Biggest European Bank
May Buy into Bank of China
Politically Correct' but Wrong
All the Same
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in June
Liulichang -- Antiques Street
Discovery Astronaut Completes
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Road to UN Reform to Be Winding
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New Tax Law Needed to Narrow
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Constitution Writers Consider
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Deadlocked Nuclear Talks Extend
into Weekend
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Chinese Are
Talks of North Korea, US Come
to 'Substantial' Phase
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Students United in Birthday Greetings
Taiwan DPP's Ideology Hinders
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Diving: Hu Jia Wins Men's 10m
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Will New Round Break Deadlock
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Curbs on Housing Market Praised
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Winners All if HK Hosts Games
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Public Gain Access to 'Cultural
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EU Strives to Lift Arms Embargo
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Sima Qian -- Man of Record
Video of Saddam's Questioning
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Tsang Rallies Masses, Touches
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Chinese Girls Launch Assault
Nationwide War on Pollutants Expands
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Finger-pointing Does More Harm
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Asia Joins Hands for New
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Beijing Demands Better Policing:
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NPC Version Vital for CE Bypoll
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Township Governments
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Rhythm of Ethnicity Moves a
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Vegetable Prices Jump 53% in
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Astronauts Complete Swift Space
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Law to Advance Cross-Straits Ties
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Indonesian Court Sentences Terror
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'The Year of the Bear'
Ancient Banyan Village
A Feast for the Eyes
Festival Provides Rural Life Experience
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Liulichang -- Antiques
Street
Liulichang is known throughout China and the world for its ancient books,
calligraphy, paintings, rubbings, ink stones and ink. The street, which
is only 750 meters long, is located south of Hepingmen (Peace) Gate within
walking distance of the Hepingmen Quanjude Peking Duck Restaurant.
In Ming and Qing times, Liulichang was a favorite haunt for scholars,
painters and calligraphers that gathered there to write, compile and purchase
books, as well as to paint and compose poetry. By the Kangxi period (1661-1722),
Liulichang had become a flourishing cultural center and was described
as having "homes and buildings lined up like fish scales." During
the Qianlong period (1736-1796), the street was even more prosperous.
There one could find "rooms filed to the roof beams with all kinds
of books," "a street filled with treasures and trinkets,"
and the "quintessence of all the markets in the capital concentrated
in one street." When Emperor Qianlong decided to revise the Complete
Library of the Four Branches of Literature, he ordered scholars from the
project, and Liulichang became a center for research in textual criticism.
For visiting scholars, a book-buying trip to Liulichang' s over 30 bookstores
was one of the pleasure of a stay in Beijing.
The Liulichang of Qianlong period was described in the notes of Li Wenzao:
"To the south of the kiln is bridge which separates the tile works
in to two sections. To the east of the bridge, the street is narrow and
for the most part, the shops there sell spectacles, metal flues for household
use, and daily necessities. To the west of the bridge, the road is wider,
and besides the regular bookshops, there are shops selling antiques and
other curios, shops specializing in calligraphy books, scroll mounters,
professional scribes, engravers of name seals and wooden blocks for painting,
as well as shops where stone tablets are inscribed. Here also are shops
offering the articles needed by a scholar participating in the imperial
examinations-brushed, paper, ink bottles, paperweights¡" This was
Liulichang up till the end of the Qing Dynasty. In his book Postscript
to the Bookshops of Liulicahng, the bibliographer Miao Quansun (1844-1919)
listed bookshops, the names of which had remained unchanged from the Qianlong
period up through the early 20th century. Those established more recently
were also recorded, of which one, Hanwenzhai, was still in business during
the 1950s.
At the end of the Qing Dynasty, the Superior-Level Normal School, the
Five-Cities (in the Ming, Beijing was divided into five city districts)
School and the headquarters of the Telephone Company were built on the
site of the glazed tile works. In 1927, when Hepingmen (Peace) Gate was
opened up in the city wall, the bridge was demolished and Nanxinhua Road
was built, dividing Liulichang into eastern and western sections. The
east became known as a center for antiques and curious, while the west
was famous for its books. Shanghai Commercial Press, China Publishing
House and Youzheng Press, which published books of Chinese calligraphy,
all established branches here.
In 1950, the people's government passed laws to prohibit the export of
valuable antiques and books. The Palace Museum and the Museum of Chinese
History bought up all important historical artifacts, paintings, calligraphy
and other works of art that had been scattered among Liulichang's shops.
Books of Song and Yuan dynasty woodblock prints, Ming and Qing classics,
old hand - annotated texts and the Beijing Library, Beijing University
and Beijing Normal University bought publication.
In 1949, Liulichang still had over 170 shops. In 1956, following the
transition to joint state- private ownership, many of the small shops
were amalgamated into large yet uniquely individual enterprises. The Baoguzhai
(Studio of Precious Antiquity) dealt in paintings and calligraphy; the
Qingyuntang (Happy Cloud Studio) sold rubbings, collotypes, ink slabs
and name seal; and the Yunguzhai (Studio of Chairman Antiquity) sold pottery,
bronzes, jade and porcelain from various dynasties, as well as fine handicrafts
from the Ming and Qing. The Cuizhenzhai (Studio of Collected Treasures)
specialized in ancient inscriptions, porcelain and pottery and the Moyuange
(Affinity for Ink Pavilion) specialized in the calligraphy and paintings
of famous modern artists. The Jiguge (Draw from Antiquity Pavilion) produced
ceramic figurines and horses designed on ancient models as well as colored
rubbings, while the Suiyaxuan (Gallery of Profound Refinement), built
on the old site of Haiwangcun (Village of the Sea King), dealt in books
on history, literature and philosophy as well as important modern works
on archaeology and medicine. The list also includes Hukaiwen, Daiyuexuan
and Yidege, all of which dealt exclusively in Chinese writing brushed,
ink and other writing implements, as well as a variety of arts and crafts.
Today, inside the large courtyard of the China Art Gallery sells works
of famous scrolls, hanging scrolls, albums and fans.
There are also shops for paper, scroll-mounting, book binding and the
carving of stone tablets and name seals. The most famous of these is Rongbaozhai
(Studio of Glorious Treasures), which has a history of over 200 years.
Here internationally renowned reproductions of Chinese paintings are made
using the traditional technique of woodblock color printing. It was the
craftsmen of Rongbaozhai who reproduced in six volumes the collection
of Beiping Woodcut Stationery With Illustrated Poems Edited by Lu Xun
and Zheng Zhenduo in 1933.
Liulichang' s history can be traced back to the Tang Dynasty when it
was part of the prefecture of Ji. Under the Liao it was known as Haiwangcun
(Village of the Sea King). The kiln, which made glazed tiles, was first
built in the Yuan Dynasty. When Ming rulers began to build their palaces
in Beijing, the factory was enlarged and became one of the five kilns
under control of the Board of Works. Most glazed structural components
of the Ming halls and palaces were produced in these factories.
In 1979, the State Council approved a recommendation to restore and expand
Liulichang. The original shops have been restored and the road broadened
into a 15-meter-wide pedestrian mall. A museum displaying classical paintings,
calligraphy and other antiquities tells the story of the old street.
Add: Liulichang Street, Xuanwu District;
Entry ticket: free;
Transport: Subway: Go to Hepingmen Station;
or Bus No.s 6, 14, 15, 25, 50, 53, 57, 102 and 105.
Untitled Document
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