1) The Book of Rites (6 1), written by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, collated by Sun Qing. The remaining 35 volumes (Volume 1- 14, Volume 18- 19, Volume 2 1-23, Volume 26-4 1) are included in the Bibliography of Chinese Rare Books.
2) The Book of Rites (6 1) was carved by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, and it was carved in Sun Shi Pangu Caotang from the tenth year of Xianfeng (1860) to the seventh year of Tongzhi (1868). Zong Cheng's Notes in Qing Dynasty are contained in the Bibliography of Rare Chinese Ancient Books, and are now in the Anhui Provincial Museum of Literature and History.
3) The Book of Rites (6 1) was carved by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, and it was carved in Sun Shi Pangu Caotang from the tenth year of Xianfeng (1860) to the seventh year of Tongzhi (1868). Chen Jiao was published in the Bibliography of Rare Chinese Ancient Books in the Qing Dynasty and is now in the Fujian Provincial Library.
4) Collection of Rites of Qing Dynasty (6 1), written by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, was engraved in Pangu Caotang, Sun Shi from the tenth year of Xianfeng (1860) to the seventh year of Tongzhi (1868), and is now in the National Library. Nanjing Library also has this book, and the card descriptions are: Collection of the Book of Rites, 6 1 volume, The Book of Rites 1 volume, and the printed edition of Pangu Caotang in Sun Shi, Rui 'an in the tenth year of Qing Xianfeng (1860), 16 volume. Call number (209 1). "
5) The Book of Rites (6 1) was carved by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, and it was carved in Sun Shi Pangu Caotang from the tenth year of Xianfeng (1860) to the seventh year of Tongzhi (1868); In the seventh year of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty (AD 1868), Sun proofread the version. This book is now in Nanjing Library, and its descriptions are as follows: Collection of the Book of Rites (61 volumes), Attached to the Book of Rites (1 volume), printed by Pangu Caotang in Sun Shi, Rui 'an in the third year of Tongzhi (1864), with 16 volumes. Telephone number: 9436 1. "The Book Catalogue of Shao Ting's Biography" records that: "The tenth year of Qing Xianfeng (1860) was published in Sun Shi, Ruian. "Existing bibliography of Jiangsu Library: Pangu Caotang in Sun Shi, Qing Rui 'an, with Ding Shu, 16 volume. The Book Selling Couple was written in Pangu Caotang from Gengshen (AD 1860) to Jiazi (AD 1864) in Tongzhi. Catalogue of Chinese Characters in Institute of Humanities, Kyoto University: "Journal of Pangu Caotang in Sun Shi, Ruian in Xianfeng Decade". "The first draft of ancient books collation: The Engraving of Pangu Caotang in Sun Shi, Rui 'an in the tenth year of Xianfeng (AD 1860), 12." The catalogue of China's thread-bound books is as follows: "Tongzhi of Qing Dynasty, Volume 14, call number: 129456-69." There is a similar record in the catalogue of Hanfen books: "Xianfeng Gengshen (1860) has 14 volumes." The Catalogue of Book Titles of Ordinary Thread-bound Books in Beijing Library records: "In the seventh year of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty (AD 1868), Sun proofread 20 volumes, which are now in the collection of the National Library." The current issue is: Seven Years of Tongzhi (1868), with 24 volumes. Telephone number: 095.3 127/368-02. Bibliography of ancient books in Hong Kong. The current issue is: "Twenty-four volumes, published in Sun Shi Pangu Caotang in the third year of Tongzhi (AD 1864). Xinya (referring to the library of Xinya College in Hong Kong) requests the book number: 094.32 1246. "Press: Each bibliography records different versions of The Book of Rites. It is wrong to record the versions of Xianfeng Gengshen (1860), Pangu Caotang Tongzhi three-year (1864) or Xianfeng Gengshen (1860) to Tongzhi Jiazi (1864). From the preface made by Sun in front of the book and the postscript made at the back of the book, we can clearly know that the book was carved in the years of Gengshen and Xianfeng, and was burned by the rebel army before it was completed. When the supplement was completed, it was March of Tongzhi Chen Wu (1868). Therefore, before reading this book, the person who recorded the manuscript of Xianfeng Gengshen was mistaken for "Xianfeng Gengshen Ruian Pangu Caotang Carving". The person who recorded the year of Tongzhi Jiazi (1864) was mistaken for "Mo Youzhi visited Tongzhi Jiazi Dushan" before reading this book. Therefore, although the above-mentioned books have different titles and descriptions, they belong to the same edition-Pangu Caotang engraving from the tenth year of Xianfeng in Qing Dynasty (1860) to the seventh year of Tongzhi (1868) or Sun engraving from the seventh year of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty (1868). The so-called Qing Daoguang Engraving Edition in the Catalogue of Class Books has fourteen volumes (eight to sixty-one), and the call number is+041.14/1246. Consider it a recording error. When Sun was sent out of the basket by his great-grandson Yu Kun in Xianfeng for three years (1853), The Book of Rites was just a manuscript.
6) Qing edition, revised by Sun in the seventh year of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty (A.D. 1868), 14. This book is in the library of Nanjing Normal University. There is no Sun in the Travel Notes of Mr. Xuan Jing, and its version format is the same as that of Xu's complete book. There is a seal of "Jiangnan University Library Collection". There is a call number on the book: 129458.
7) The Book of Rites of Qing Dynasty (6 1) was written by Sun Xidan, a new edition of Suzhou Tongzhi Chen Wu (A.D. 1868) in Qing Dynasty. Two Bibliographic Questions and Answers: "Tongzhi Chen Wu Suzhou New Edition, and today I want to talk about Yongjia Series."
The bibliography answers questions and supplements. Also: "Suzhou New Engraving. Ren Bu] Sun Shurui, Sun An and Yi Yan edited Yongjia Series. " It is suspected that it was Sun's engraving in the seventh year of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty (AD 1868).
8) Yongjia series is a reprint of Pangu Caotang. It is suspected that it was a block-printed edition of Sun proofreading in the seventh year of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty (AD 1868). Sun published thirteen books of Yongjia Collection, but there was no Book of Rites.
9) The Basic Series of Chinese Studies was reprinted in block print in the seventh year of Tongzhi (AD 1868). The extensive records of Chinese series record: The Book of Rites is sixty-one volumes, first published in 22 years of the Republic of China (193), and printed in two volumes. It also includes the bibliography of China ancient books in the library of Beijing Normal University.
10) This edition of Universal Library was reprinted in 7-minute editions in the seventh year of Tongzhi (A.D. 1868).
1 1) Printed Collection of the Book of Rites (6 1), written by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, photocopied by Taiwan Province Taibei Literature and History Zhe Publishing House1June, 988, according to the seventh year of Tongzhi (A.D. 1868), accounting for 60%.
12) Collating The Book of Rites (Volume 6 1), written by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, collated by Zhonghua Book Company, collated by Shen Xiaohuan and Wang Xingxian. This book is based on Pangu Caotang and collated with reference to Ku, Zheng Xuan's Notes and Kong's Justice. At the front of the book, the notes narrate the teaching origin, records, characteristics and proofreading principles of The Book of Rites. This book was published by Zhonghua Book Company in February 19, with a total of 3 volumes. 1995 was printed again in May, and it was the most popular. Taiwan Province Literature, History and Philosophy Publishing House1August, 990, reprinted by Zhonghua Book Company, 2 volumes, 1487 pages.
13) Notes on the Book of Rites (6 1), written by Sun Xidan in Qing Dynasty, old notes, 17. It is listed in the Bibliography of Rare Books Collected by Peking University Library, and is now in Peking University Library.
14) Continuation of Siku Quanshu. See Volume 103 and Volume 104 of Continued Sikuquanshu. This book was photocopied by Sun, who spent seven years in the library of East China Normal University (1868). Before this book, there was no "Mr. Xuan Jing's behavior". There is a picture of "Dongzha Shi Mei Ancient Village Engraving", which is not found in his book. By investigating the engraving of Sun Shi Pangu Caotang and the collection of Nanshi Normal University from the tenth year of Xianfeng in Qing Dynasty (A.D. 1860) to the seventh year of Tongzhi (A.D. 1868), it is considered that they are two versions. The latter does not have Sun's The Behavior of Mr. Xuan Jing, and each volume has a unified version. Half a page 13 lines, 22 words for each line of scripture, and 2 1 words for each line of comments. The lettering size is consistent. The former has uncertain lines per volume, and some are dense and some are sparse. The same word is written differently in different volumes, and the fonts before and after it are different. Sometimes it is in the middle of the same volume, which is caused by different letterers before and after lettering. Therefore, the former is the earliest engraving of Pangu Caotang in Sun Shi, Rui 'an from the tenth year of Xianfeng (A.D. 1860) to the seventh year of Tongzhi (A.D. 1868). The latter may be the Yongjia series newly engraved in Suzhou, that is, Sun's engraving in the seventh year of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty (1868).