Extensive Records of the Taiping Era
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The Extensive Records of the Taiping Era (traditional Chinese: 太平廣記; pinyin: Tàipíng Guǎngjì) is a collection of stories compiled under the editorship of Li Fang, first published in 978. The book is divided into 500 volumes (juan 卷) and consists of about 3 million words (or, Chinese characters). It is a collection of about seven thousand stories that were selected from over three hundred books and novels from the Han Dynasty to the early Song Dynasty, many of which have long been lost. Some stories are historical or naturalistic anecdotes, each is replete with a historical elements, and qualify as fiction, but the topics are mostly supernatural, about Buddhist and Daoist priests, immortals, ghosts, and various deities. They include a number of Tang stories that are famous works of literature in their own right, and also inspired later works.
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[edit] References
- Charles E. Hammond, "T'ang Legends: History and Hearsay" Tamkang Review 20.4 (summer 1990), pp. 359-82.
- Cheng, Yizhong, "Taiping Guangji" ("Extensive Records of the Taiping Era "). Encyclopedia of China (Chinese Literature Edition), 1st ed.