Which emperor organized the compilation of Sikuquanshu?
Sikuquanshu was compiled by Emperor Qianlong of Qing Dynasty. According to the compilation of Sikuquanshu, it was put forward in the thirty-seventh year of Emperor Gaozong of Qing Dynasty (1772), and the Sikuquanshu Museum was formally established in February of the following year. Editor Ji Yun (played by Xiaolan) devoted his whole life to compiling and led 360 first-class bachelors to make joint efforts. At the end of forty-six years in Qianlong (178 1), the first edition of Sikuquanshu, namely Wen Yuan Library, was officially completed, which lasted for nine years. Since then, three books have been written one after another, namely Wensui Geben (in November of Qianlong forty-seven years), Wen Yuan Geben (in November of Qianlong forty-eight years) and Jinwen Geben (in November of Qianlong forty-nine years). Sikuquanshu is the largest series in the history of China personally organized by Emperor Qianlong. The book consists of four parts, namely Classics, History, Zi and Ji, with 346 1 title and 79,039 volumes, with a total word count of nearly 1 100 million words, which can be described as a super cultural ceremony. Sikuquanshu is the largest series in the history of China personally organized by Emperor Qianlong. It started at 1772 and was compiled after ten years. The series is divided into four parts: classics, history, books and collections, hence the name Sku. According to Wen Jin Ge Ji, the book contains 3503 kinds of ancient books, 79337 volumes, and more than 36000 volumes are bound, which preserves a wealth of literature. The name "Four Treasures of the Study" originated in the early Tang Dynasty. In the early Tang Dynasty, the official books were divided into four stacks, namely "Four Treasures of the Study" or "Four Treasures of the Study". The quartering of the subset of classics and history is the main method of ancient book classification, which basically covers all ancient books, so it is called "the whole book". In the early years of Qianlong in the Qing Dynasty, Zhou Yongnian, a scholar, put forward the theory of Confucianism and Tibet, and advocated that Confucian works should be integrated for people to borrow. Emperor Kangxi should be Qianlong! Gan Long's Siku Quanshu is the largest official book in ancient China and the largest series in ancient China. It is divided into four parts: classics, history, books and collections, hence the name Siku. Because it basically includes all the ancient books, it is called "the whole book". The compilation of Sikuquanshu began in the thirty-seventh year of Qing Qianlong (1772), and books were first collected from all over the country. In February of the thirty-eighth year of Qing Qianlong, the imperial court established the "Siku Quanshu Museum", which was responsible for compiling Siku Quanshu. Yan Yong, the sixth son of Qianlong, was in charge, Yu Minzhong, a university student and minister of military aircraft, served as president, Yu Minzhong, a university student and six ministers and assistant minister, served as vice president, and Ji Yun, a famous scholar, served as editor-in-chief, and began to compile this voluminous series. There are as many as 360 scholars and scholars who participated in the compilation and officially listed, and nearly 4000 copywriters. Sikuquanshu contains books collected all over the country at that time, books collected by the Qing court, and ancient lost articles compiled by Yongle Grand Ceremony. When you're done, copy it again in a specific format. The book contains more than 3,500 kinds of ancient books, 79,000 volumes, and more than 36,000 volumes, about 700 million words. In fact, the process of compiling Sikuquanshu is also a forbidden process. In the process of book revision of 10 years, more than 3 kinds of books were banned and more than 50,000 copies were banned. Many books included in Sikuquanshu are old-fashioned, and the original texts have been deleted. Nevertheless, it contains most important ancient books from the pre-Qin Dynasty to the Qing Dynasty, covering almost all academic fields in ancient China, and has preserved a wealth of literature. In order to be beautiful and easy to identify, Sikuquanshu is decorated with color separation. The colors of scenery, stone, stone and auspicious are green, red, white (or light blue) and gray-black, depending on spring, summer, autumn and winter. Because the catalogue of Sikuquanshu is the outline of the whole book, the yellow color representing the center is adopted. There are seven volumes in the book, which are divided into seven pavilions: Wenyuan Pavilion in the Forbidden City, Wenyuan Pavilion in the Yuanmingyuan, Jinwen Pavilion in chengde mountain resort and Wenshui Pavilion in Fengtian (now Shenyang) as the "Palace Four Pavilion" (or "North Pavilion"); Wenzong Pavilion in Zhenjiang, Wen Lan Pavilion in Hangzhou and Wenhui Pavilion in Yangzhou are "three pavilions in Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Shanghai" (or "Nansang Pavilion"). Sikuquanshu has experienced many vicissitudes, many of which were destroyed by war. Up to now, there are only three and a half copies left: the Wen Yuan Pavilion is now in the National Palace Museum, the Jinwen Pavilion is now in the National Library of China, the Wenshui Pavilion is now in the Gansu Provincial Library, and the incomplete Wen Lan Pavilion is copied and supplemented in the Zhejiang Provincial Library. The Man Jin Pavilion in the National Library of China is a set of complete books in Siku, which is the only original shelf, original letter and original book. * * * There are 128 bookshelves, 6 144 letters and 36,304 volumes. It is one of the four academic collections of the National Library of China. Emperor Qianlong was a handsome man. Only the Yongle Grand Ceremony was written by Qianlong, and Ji Xiaolan was in charge.