Tongzhi (encyclopedia)


Tongzhi is an 1161 Chinese general knowledge encyclopedia written by Zheng Qiao in the Song dynasty, containing 200 chapters on diverse topics.

Contents

After the Tongdian, it was the second encyclopedia of the Santong, which were often published together. It is also included second among the Shitong, compiled in the Qing dynasty. The Tongzhi became a model for most of the later encyclopedias.
Tongzhi is arranged in 200 volumes, plus three volumes of notes. The historical information covers from earliest times to the end of the Tang dynasty. The contents include basic annals, yearly chronicles, hereditary houses, ranked biographies, and twenty monographs on various topics, the last of which are considered the most original part. The twenty monographs, which comprise 52 volumes, deal with clans, the six classes of characters, phonetics, astronomy, geography, capital cities, rituals, posthumous names, vessels and robes, music, official titles, the examination system, punishment, food and money, arts and literature, collation, images, metal and stone, disasters and fortunes, insects and plants. The comprehensivity of these monographs has long been noted; the Siku Quanshu Zongmu Tiyao praised them in particular.
The chapter on images has attracted considerable interest among art theorists. In this section, he gives images primacy in transmitting values, using metaphor that compares the images as the warp and the text as the weft.
The chapter on arts and literature has the most detailed bibliographic scheme in pre-modern China.

Modern editions