Basic introduction:
1, regular script (positive? Regular script is a common handwritten font style in China's calligraphy, and it is a modern popular handwritten Chinese character.
2. This style is gradually evolved from official script, which is more simplified, horizontal and vertical, and can be divided into big letters, middle letters and small letters. Ou Yangxun, Yan Zhenqing, Liu Gongquan and Zhao Mengfu are four masters of regular script.
3. Regular script is also called regular script, real script and official script. Li Shu, founded by Cheng Miao, has gradually evolved and become more simplified and level. Ci Hai is interpreted as "square and straight, which can be used as a model." Hence the name regular script. It began at the end of the Han dynasty and has been popular until modern times.
4. The appearance of regular script follows closely Han Li's composition and pursues the further development of formal beauty. During the Three Kingdoms period at the end of Han Dynasty, Chinese characters were gradually changed to strokes such as "side" (dot), "grazing" (long left), "pecking" (short left) and "lifting" (straight hook), which made the structure more rigorous. Such as Wuwei medical bamboo slips and Juyan Han bamboo slips. Regular script is characterized by neat rules and is a model in fonts, so it is called regular script and has been used until modern times.
5, regular script has the meaning of model, Zhang Huaiguan's "book broken" has been talked about first. People in the Six Dynasties still used it habitually, such as Yang Xin's Cai, and On the Biography of Wei Shou, saying, "Shou is a general, and Jingzhao people are good at regular script." That's the abbreviation of "eight-block method", which didn't replace the name of the official book until the Northern Song Dynasty, and its content was obviously different from the ancient name. There is probably an example of the above.
6. Regular script is the most popular script in China feudal society from the Southern and Northern Dynasties to the Jin and Tang Dynasties. Before the appearance of regular script, China calligraphy had produced three styles: Da Zhuan, Xiao Zhuan and Li Shu. Generally speaking, the ancient characters before Xiao Zhuan are collectively referred to as Da Zhuan, including Oracle Bone Inscriptions, bronze inscriptions and six languages except Qin in the Warring States Period. Xiao Zhuan is a popular script after Qin unified China. On the basis of Qin script, refer to other vassal scripts. In order to facilitate writing, it is standardized and unified. This is the first standardized regular script in the history of calligraphy in China.