Chinese classic texts


Specifically speaking, the Chinese classic texts or Chinese canonical texts () refer to the pre-Qin Chinese texts, especially the Confucian Four Books and Five Classics (四書五經). All of these pre-Qin text were written in classical Chinese. They can be referred to as jing (經).

Generally speaking, the Chinese classic texts refer to texts, be they written in vernacular Chinese or in classical Chinese, that existed before 1912, when the last imperial power in China, the Qing Dynasty, fell. These can include shi (史, historical works), zi (子, philosophical works belonging to schools of thought other than the Confucian, but also works of agriculture, medicine, mathematics, astronomy, divination, art criticism, and all sorts of miscellaneous writings) and ji (集, literary works) as well as jing.

In imperial China, the Four Books and Five Classics were the subject of mandatory study by those Confucian scholars who wished to become government officials. Any political discussion was full of references to this background, and one could not be one of the literati, or even a military officer, without knowing them. Generally, children first studied the Chinese characters with rote memorization of the Three Character Classic and Hundred Family Surnames, then went on to memorize the other classics, in order to ascend in the social hierarchy.

Pre-Qin texts (before 221 BCE)

Post-Qin texts (after 206 BCE)

See also

Sources and external links