Xǔ Shèn (traditional Chinese: 許慎; simplified Chinese: 许慎; pinyin: Xǔ Shèn; Wade-Giles: Hsü Shen; ca. 58 CE – ca. 147 CE) was a Chinese philologist of the Han Dynasty. He was the author of Shuowen Jiezi, the first Chinese dictionary with character analysis, as well as the first to organize the characters by shared components. It contains over 9,000 character entries under
A native of the present-day Yancheng District (郾城) City of Luohe (漯河) in Henan Province, Xu Shen was a renowned Confucianist scholar who specialized in the Five Classics, and wrote the Wujing yiyi (五經異義 "Differing Meanings in the Five Classics"). Although the original text was partially lost or corrupted by the Tang Dynasty, the Qing Dynasty scholar Chen Shouqi (陳壽棋; 1771–1834) partially reconstructed the work from fragments and quotations.
References
- He Jiuying 何九盈 (1995). Zhongguo gudai yuyanxue shi (中囯古代语言学史 "A history of ancient Chinese linguistics"). Guangzhou: Guangdong jiaoyu chubanshe.
See also
- Shuowen Jiezi
List of Shuowen Jiezi radicals
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