Packaging Printing plant tells you about the development of printing Printing originated in China and originated from the unique seal culture of the Chinese people. It is gradually developed and synthesized by two methods of rubbing and stamping. It is a long time and accumulated experience of many people. It is a human being. The crystallization of wisdom. The earliest existing documents and the earliest Chinese engraving printed objects are in 600 AD, that is, the early Tang Dynasty. Engraving printing appeared in the early Tang Dynasty in the 7th century. During the Qingli years of Song Renzong (1041-1049), Bi Sheng invented the movable type printing technique. This is the earliest recorded type printing in the world. From 1241 to 1250, Yang Gu was Kublai’s adviser, Yao Shu, printed Zhu Xi's "Elementary School", "Jin Si Lu" and Lu Zuqian's "Jing Shi Lun Ji" and other books distributed in movable type. Yuan Dynasty scientist Wang Zhen (1260-1330) invented the wood movable type (someone also supported the Song Dynasty wood movable type book, and proposed several versions to prove it. Among them is the "Song type movable type book" that is often mentioned by people. "Mao Poems." Since the word "自" is arranged horizontally in the first edition of the book's "Tangfeng·Shanyoushu" chapter, it can be proved to be a movable type version.
Wang Zhen described the wooden movable type in the "Nongshu": "Today there is a clever way of making plank wood for printing helmets, cutting bamboo slices for the line, carving wood for the characters, using a small saw to open each, making one for each. Use a knife to repair the characters on all sides, compare the size and height. Then set the characters and cut them into bamboo slices. The helmet characters are full. Use a wooden stab to make the firm characters immobile. Then use ink to print them. ". Wang Zhen printed 100 copies of "Jingde County Chronicles" with 60,000 characters in 1299 using wood type.
The early records of Chinese metal movable type can be found in Yuan Dynasty scientist Wang Zhen (1260-1330) in "Making Movable Type Printing Calligraphy" (1298): "In modern times, tin was also used to make characters, and iron bars were used to run through them, and they were embedded in helmets. , Jiexing printed books, but the above words are difficult to make ink, and the printing rate is too bad, so it can’t be done for a long time.”