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Ouyang Xun

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Name
  
Ouyang Xun

Role
  
Government official

Died
  
641 AD, Anhui, China


Ouyang Xun Caliriel People
Similar People
  
Liu Gongquan, Yan Zhenqing, Yu Shinan

Ouyang Xun’s Inscription on the Sweet Spring in the Jiucheng Palace


Ouyang Xun (Chinese: 歐陽詢; Wade–Giles: Ou-yang Hsun) (557–641), courtesy name Xinben (信本), was a Confucian scholar and calligrapher of the early Tang Dynasty. He was born in Hunan, Changsha, to a family of government officials; and died in modern Anhui province.

Contents

Poem in Chinese calligraphy (Ouyang style 1)


Achievements

Ouyang Xun Ouyang Xun Calligraphy China Online Museum Chinese

He was a talented student who read widely in the classics. He served under the Sui Dynasty in 611 as Imperial Doctor. He served under the Tang Dynasty as censor and scholar at the Hongwen Academy. There he taught calligraphy. He was a principal contributor to the Yiwen Leiju.

He became the Imperial Calligrapher and inscribed several major imperial steles. He was good at regular script and his most famous work is the Stele in the Jiucheng Palace. He was considered a cultured scholar and a government official. Along with Yu Shinan, Xue Ji, and Chu Suiliang he became known as one of the Four Great Calligraphers of the Early Tang.


References

Ouyang Xun Wikipedia