
Xǔ Shèn
'Xǔ Shèn' (; ca.
58 CE – ca.
147 CE) was the author of ''
Shuōwén Jiězì'' (說文解字), which was the first etymological
Chinese character dictionary, as well as the first to organize the characters by shared components. It contains over 9,000 character entries under 540
section headers (部首 ''bùshǒu'', radicals), explaining the origins of the characters based primarily upon a study of the earlier
seal script. Xu completed his dictionary in
100 CE but, for political reasons, waited until
121 CE before presenting the finished work to the
Emperor An of Han China.
Xǔ Shèn lived during the
Eastern Hàn Dynasty, and was from the present-day Yancheng District (郾城) City of
Luohe (漯河) in
Henan Province. He was a renowned
Confucianist scholar who specialized in the
Five Classics, and wrote the ''Wujing yiyi'' (五經異義 "Differing Meanings in the Five Classics"). Although the original text was lost and corrupted by the
Tang Dynasty, the
Qing Dynasty scholar Chen Shouqi (陳壽棋, 1771–1834) partially reconstructed the ''Wujing yiyi'' from fragments and quotations.
See also
★
Seal script