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Lesser Seal Script / Small Seal Script

Small seal script is a style of calligraphy derived from big seal script. After unifying the country, the First Emperor of Qin(259-210BC) ordered Li Si(?-208BC), his prime minister, to simplify the big seal script that was most popular in the Western Zhou period. This simplified script was officially issued as the standard form of handwriting. Small seal script uses beautifully cursive and uniform lines, facilitating handwriting and reading by reducing the number of variant forms of Chinese characters. Characters written in this style are gracefully long and symmetrical; they feature a smooth starting stroke and a natural, final vertical one. The curvy lines vary as the calligrapher wishes, thus producing many simple yet elegant variations. Calligraphers of all ages have loved small seal script, a unique style of calligraphic art. It was replaced by clerical script in the Han Dynasty.

CITATION
1
Cangjie written by Prime Minister Li Si, Yuanli written by the imperial horse-drawn carriage manager Zhao Gao, and Broad Learning written by the imperial astronomer Hu Wujing are all separate parts of an early school primer, and all borrow heavily from Shizhou, an early dictionary of Chinese big seal characters, with quite a few simplifications and transformations. Hence what we call "small seal script" today.
CITATION
2
During the Dali Reign period of Emperor Daizong in the Tang Dynasty, Li Yangbing's wonderfully handwritten small-seal characters crowned the world. His amended version of Xu Shen's Explanation of Script and Elucidation of Characters revised small-seal script in a number of ways. Learners of small-seal calligraphy admired and followed him, thus making it prosperous again.
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