Also known as Three Chapters
The Cangjiepian, also known as the Three Chapters (, sāncāng), was a BCE Chinese primer and a prototype for Chinese dictionaries. Li Si, Chancellor of the Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE), compiled it for the purpose of reforming written Chinese into the new orthographic standard Small Seal Script. Beginning in the Han dynasty (206 BCE – 221 CE), many scholars and lexicographers expanded and annotated the Cangjiepian. By the end of the Tang dynasty (618–907), it had become a lost work, but in 1977, archeologists discovered a cache of (c. 165 BCE) texts written on bamboo strips, including fragments of
《苍颉篇》,又名《仓颉篇》,是秦朝丞相李斯所作,共有七章,是秦始皇用以统一文字的课本。汉朝初年曾经合《苍颉》、赵高所作《爰历》、胡毋敬所作《博学》三篇五十五章,仍称《苍颉篇》。经过整理以后的《苍颉篇》,共三千三百字。
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).