Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - What is the historical origin of printing?

What is the historical origin of printing?

Printing is one of the four great inventions in ancient China. Its characteristics are convenient, flexible, time-saving and labor-saving, which creates conditions for the wide dissemination and exchange of knowledge.

The invention of printing is the crystallization of the wisdom of our ancestors, and it has a long and arduous exploration process.

The techniques of seal cutting, rubbing and printing and dyeing in ancient China laid the foundation for the advent of printing.

The development of printing in China experienced two stages: block printing and movable type printing, but it originated from seals in the pre-Qin period.

Before the invention of printing, the spread of culture mainly depended on handwritten books. Handwriting is time-consuming and laborious, and it is easy to make mistakes and omissions, which hinders the development of culture and brings undue losses to the spread of culture.

Seals and stone carvings provide direct experience enlightenment for printing, and the method of inking stone tablets with paper points out the direction for block printing.

Seals existed in the pre-Qin period, generally only a few words, indicating names, official positions or institutions. All seals are engraved and reflected, and there is a difference between yin and yang.

Wen Yin refers to characters or patterns with concave surfaces. Characters or patterns below the plane of the object are formed by printing or characterization of the stamp; Yang Wen refers to words or patterns with raised surfaces. Through die printing, knife engraving, pen overlapping and other means, characters and patterns higher than the plane of the object appear.

Before paper appeared, official documents or letters were written on bamboo slips. After writing, tie it with a rope, seal it with sticky mud at the ligation place, and cover the seal with mud, which is called "mud seal". Mud sealing is printing on mud, which was a secret at that time.