When talking about the writing utensils of Chinese
characters, people often first think of the four treasures of the study, i.e.
brush, ink stick, ink slab and paper. Among them, paper is the carrier of
writing, and brush is the main writing tool. Besides brush and ink, the writing
utensils of Chinese characters include graver,Jijue(knife used for engraving on
metals and stones), etc. Textual researches find that scripts on porcelain
ware of about six to seven thousand years ago found in Banpo of Xi'an City,
Dawenkou of Shandong Province and other places have several patterns, such as
patterns of human faces and swimming fishes, and so on, which were drawn with a
similar tool similar to pen. It proves that the brush prevalent in later period
had formed its rudiment at that time. The oldest brush extant today is the brush
made in the Chu State of the late Spring and Autumn Period (770-476BC). The
brush handle is a solid bamboo rod, and its one end is cleaved with brush hair
inserted there. The cleaved part is hooped tightly with thin thread. A layer of
paint is applied to the brush handle. The brush hair is made of very good rabbit
hair about 2.5 cm long. Around the Qin (221-206BC) and Han (206BC-220AD)
dynasties, people also used wood to make brush handle. After the Han Dynasty,
the making technique of brush almost remained the same, and the materials
included ivory, colored glaze, mottled bamboo, jade pipe and rhinoceros horn, as
well as hair of rabbit, goat, deer, wolf, horse, tiger and so on. It requires a more unyielding engraving tool in order
to write on metals, stones, tortoise shells, animal bones and other hard
materials. In the scripts on porcelain ware six to seven thousand years ago, the
engraving tool might be made of jade or animals' teeth. As for the scripts on
tortoise shells and animal bones, scholars generally believe that the most
possible engraving tool was bronze cutting tool. Similar engraving tools
includeJijue, graver, and iron pen which emerged in comparatively late period.
The graver used in seal cutting today appeared at least as early as in the
Warring States Period (475-221BC). Because it was inconvenient to write Chinese
characters and took much time and energy to complete a comparatively long
article or do a lot of recording work with engraving tools, the engraving tools
gradually retreated from the realm of ordinary writing and recording, and were
only used in a limited area after the Shang (17th-11thcentury BC) and Zhou
(11thcentury -256BC) dynasties. With the improving social life and cultural level in
modern times, brush was gradually replaced by fountain pen, ballpoint pen and
other hard-tipped pens. However, as the most important writing utensil, brushes
are still used by calligraphers and they will not?phase out with changes of
times.
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