Teaching-related relics on display in Confucius' birthplace


JINAN -- An exhibition on ancient teaching items has opened in the city of Qufu, the birthplace of ancient Chinese educator and philosopher Confucius.
The exhibits include a guqin (Chinese zither) from the Confucius mansion in the Tang Dynasty, a rare edition of the Analects, as well as text books, teaching tools and teacher certificates from various dynasties.
All the exhibits were donated by individuals or cultural institutions from home and abroad, including the Confucius Institute and the Republic of Korea's Confucianism Culture Museum, according to Qi Wanxue, Party chief of Qufu Normal University, where the exhibition is held.
Luo Chenglie, an 83-year-old professor of the university, has donated more than 2,700 Confucius' badges, statues and portraits to the exhibition.
Qi said all items displayed would be collected by China's first teachers' museum, whose architectural designs have recently been finished.
Covering 40 hectares and with a floor space of 20,000 square meters, the museum will be built on the western campus of Qufu Normal University.
Confucius (551-479 BC) founded Confucianism, a school of thought that deeply influenced later generations. He was also the first Chinese person to set up private schools enrolling students from all walks of life.
- Students explore relic restoration in Xinjiang
- Study uncovers how ocean-atmosphere coupling enhances Eurasian cold waves
- Purang Gorze Dance
- China, Russia, Mongolia hold first joint border defense exercise
- Geology and minerals museum opens to public in NW China's Xinjiang
- China uses public interest litigation to protect Silk Road heritages