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Cultural institutions honor contributions to relics' protection

From:China Daily NetWriter:Wang KaihaoDate:2018-12-25

Many cultural relics of the Palace Museum-China's former imperial palace in Beijing, which is also known as the Forbidden City-and some ancient books in the collection of the National Library of China are in the two institutions due to the efforts of Zheng Zhenduo (1898-1958).

Zheng, a pioneer in cultural-relic protection in New China, was honored by the museum and library in Beijing on Wednesday. The day marked the 120th anniversary of his birth. Zheng was the first director of the National Cultural Heritage Administration after 1949.

Ancient books are among the items from Zheng Zhenduo's donation displayed at an exhibition at the National Library of China. [Photo provided to China Daily]

When he took the position, the country had just started reconstruction after the civil war. Zheng immediately began his endeavor to bring some lost treasures home.

Boyuan Tie (letter to Boyuan) and Zhongqiu Tie (letter about Mid-Autumn Festival)-top calligraphy works from the fourth century-were once beloved by emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). But they were lost after the monarchy fell.

Zheng's coordination enabled their return from Hong Kong to the Chinese mainland for 350,000 HK dollars in 1950. Zheng also persuaded art guru Zhang Daqian to sell Night Revels of Han Xizai, a 10th-century scroll painting, from his private collection to the country's cultural institutions at "a low price".

All three artworks are now among top artifacts housed at the Palace Museum.

Zheng's contributions went beyond.

"He has left abundant legacies for us to consolidate cultural relic-related work today," Shan Jixiang, director of the Palace Museum, said at the memorial seminar.

"He pushed for a legal system to protect the cultural relics. He started training others to protect them. Many of his theories still guide our everyday work."

Zheng opened the first training class in New China on ancient-book restoration in the 1950s. He wanted the Palace Museum to do more than just collect royal artifacts, by building a comprehensive collection of different artworks and educating museum visitors about the history of cultural relics.

"These ideas were pioneering in his time," says Gu Yucai, deputy director of the National Cultural Heritage Administration. "We are working on them today."

During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-1945), he saved many ancient books to prevent them from being lost.

Zheng Zhenduo (1898-1958), a pioneer in cultural-relic protection in New China. Wednesday marked the 120th anniversary of his birth. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Zheng got into debt buying some 600 ancient pottery figurines in 1947 and '48, during the civil war. However, he donated all the figurines to the country's cultural institutions after taking his official position at the heritage administration. Many of the figurines are regularly displayed in the sculpture gallery of the Palace Museum.

And after his death, Zheng's wife donated some 7,000 copies of ancient books to the National Library of China, following his will. Some items from this donation are displayed at an exhibition that opened on Wednesday at the same library as a tribute to him. A catalog of his ancient book collection was also published on the same day for academic studies.

"The exhibition is not only to show Zheng's marvelous collection," says Zhang Zhiqing, deputy director of the national library, "but also to remind people of his legacy."

Zheng advocated that archaeologists and relics researchers should not collect or buy antiques as personal belongings. In 1997, this idea was listed by the National Cultural Heritage Administration among professional ethics for workers in the field of cultural relics.

Born in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province, Zheng once taught in top higher-education institutions, such as Yenching University (now part of Peking University) and Tsinghua University in Beijing, and Fudan University in Shanghai. He also worked on history, traditional Chinese folklore and literature.

As a translator, he introduced Indian Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore's Stray Birds in China, and did many comparative studies between Chinese and Western cultures.

Zheng died in a plane crash in 1958.