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Seal Script - Chinese Art Web

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Small seal script epigraph on the standard weight prototype of Qin Dynasty. Made from iron, this prototype was unearthed in 1973 at Wendeng City, Weihai, Shandong Province.Seal script is an ancient style of Chinese calligraphy. It evolved organically out of the Zhou dynasty script, arising in the Warring State of Qin. Seal script became standardized and adopted as the formal script for all of China in the Qin dynasty, and was still widely used for decorative engraving and seals (name chops, or signets) in the Han dynasty. Ever since, its predominant use has been in seals, hence the English name. The literal translation of its Chinese name zhuanwen is decorative engraving script, because by the time this name was coined in the Han dynasty, its role had been reduced to decorational inscriptions rather than as the main script of the day.

See East Asian Calligraphy for examples of seal script compared to modern Chinese script.

Most people today cannot read the seal script, so it is generally not used outside the fields of seals and calligraphy.

Large Seal Scripts

There are two uses of the word seal script, the Large or Great Seal script, and the lesser or Small Seal Script; the latter is also called simply seal script. The Large Seal script was originally a later, vague Han dynasty reference to writing of the Qin system similar to but earlier than Small Seal. It has also been used to refer to Western Zhou forms or even oracle bones as well. Since the term is an imprecise one, not clearly referring to any specific historical script and not used with any consensus in meaning, modern scholars tend to avoid it.

Unified Small seal script

The script of the Qin system (the writing as exemplified in bronze inscriptions in the state of Qin before unification) had evolved organically from the Zhou script. Beginning around the Warring States period, it became vertically elongated with a regular appearance. This was the birth of Small Seal script, also called simply seal script. It was systematized by Li Si during the reign of the First Emperor of China Qin Shi Huang, but was not invented at that time. Through Chinese commentaries, it is known that Li Si compiled Cangjie, a non-extant work of character recognition listing some 3,300 Chinese characters in small seal script. Their form is characterised by being less rectangular and more squarish.

In the history of Chinese characters, the Small Seal script is often considered to be the ancestor of the clerical script, which in turn gave rise to all of the other scripts in use today. However, this is not quite accurate. Instead, it was a vulgar or popular script of the late Warring States to Qin period, rather than its formal seal counterpart, which evolved into the clerical script.

The first character dictionary, Shuowen Jiezi (AD 100–121), shows 9,353 small seal script characters listed under 540 section headers, the lifework of Xu Shen, during the Han Dynasty.

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