The Tiangong Kaiwu (天工開物), or The Exploitation of the Works of Nature was a Chinese encyclopedia compiled by Song Yingxing. It was published in May 1637 with funding provided by Song's patron Tu Shaokui.Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 36.Song, xiv. The Tiangong Kaiwu is an encyclopedia covering a wide range of technical issues, including the use of various gunpowder. Copies of the book were very scarce in China during the Qing dynasty (1644–1911) (due to the government's establishment of monopolies over certain industries described in the book), but original copies of the book were preserved in Japan.
As historian Joseph Needham has observed, the vast amount of accurately drawn illustrations in this encyclopedia dwarfed the amount provided in previous Chinese encyclopedias, making it a valuable written work in the history of Chinese literature.Needham, Volume 4, Part 2, 172. At the same time, the Tiangong Kaiwu broke from Chinese tradition by rarely referencing previous written work. It is instead written in a style strongly suggestive of first-hand experience. In the preface to the work, Song attributed this deviation from tradition to his poverty and low standing.
It was translated into English by E-tu Zen Sun and Shiou-chuan Sun.
Song wrote about the general terms used in agriculture, saying that the "hundred grains" referred to crops in general, while the "five grains" were specifically sesamum, , wheat, millet, and glutinous millet (rice was not included in this, says Song, because the ancients were only used to the environment of northern China, which was devoid of rice at the time).Song, 3-4. He wrote about the meticulous and proper cultivation of each crop, as well as how to avoid agricultural disasters in the process.Song, 3-31.
In aiding the text, he also provided many different drawn illustrations, including a man loosening the soil by ploughing with an ox,Song, 5. soil broken into fine particles by an ox-drawn harrow,Song, 7. men engaging in foot weeding and hand weeding of rice,Song, 9-10. a vertical waterwheel with hollow wooden cylinders dipping water into an open woodwork tub feeding an irrigation canal,Song, 13. a cylinder-type chain pump powered by a vertical waterwheel placed in a narrow, low-lying stream with a mounted rotating wheel placed at the top of an elevated plane, whereupon the cylinders fed water into an irrigation canal,Song, 15. a wooden river dam correcting the flow of water around a field of crops,Song, 16. a sluice gate controlling the flow of a water channel,Song, 17 a square-pallet chain pump powered by a horizontal waterwheel, connected by an axle to a gear-tooth wheel above, which in turn engaged a vertical gear-tooth wheel,Song, 18. another square-pallet chain pump employing an ox-drawn set of geared wheels,Song, 19. two different types of foot-treadle operated chain pumps,Song, 20-21. a lever for raising or lowering a bucket,Song, 22. a pulley-wheel for raising or lowering a bucket,Song, 25. an ox-drawn plough-seeder with a cone-shaped filter,Song, 26. an ox-drawn pair of stone rollers, used for pressing into the soil,Song, 27. the simpler process of sewing seeds by hand and pressing them into the dirt by foot,Song, 28. and finally, an illustration of men cultivating wheat with broad-headed hoes.Song, 30.
In another chapter, The Preparation of Grains, he also provided illustrations for rolling rice grains with a wooden ox-drawn roller,Song, 84 a crank-operated rotary-fan winnowing machine that separated ,Song, 85. a hand-operated wooden hulling mill,Song, 87. a hand-operated earthen hulling machine,Song, 88. a process of sieving to separate husk-free grains,Song, 89. two types of foot-operated ,Song, 91-92. a hydraulic-powered trip hammer powered by a waterwheel that rotated an axle of overhead cams,Song, 93. a horse-drawn hulling mill,Song, 96. an oxen-drawn grinding mill,Song, 98. a grinding mill operated by a vertical waterwheel,Song, 99. and a rolling mill operated by a horizontal waterwheel, the waterwheel placed in a rushing current found under a wooden deck that rotated the axle of the stone roller above within the interior of a building.Song, 103.
In his admiration for the stern-mounted steering rudder (which had been known to the Chinese since at least the 1st century AD),Needham, Volume 4, Part 3, 649-650. he wrote:
( Note: in this passage he speaks mostly of fresh-water ships at Poyang Lake and the Grand Canal.)
Song Yingxing wrote that although silk was reserved for those with economic means, both rich and poor used cotton clothing during the winter.Song, 60. In ancient times, he said, cotton was called xima ('nettle-hemp'). He outlined two different types of cotton and their characteristics: tree cotton (Ceiba pentandra) and the cotton plant (Gossypium indicum). He noted their planting in spring and their picking by autumn, as well as use of a cotton gin to separate cotton seeds that are naturally tightly fastened to fiber bolls of cotton.Song, 60-61. He noted the process of straightening the cotton fibers with wooden boards, which prepared them for the spinning wheel, the "slivers drawn out to desired size and twisted into yarns." After describing the weaving process of cotton and the different patterns used, he also described cotton padding during winter, in ancient times it was hemp padding, and that the rich could afford silk padding in their winter attire.Song, 63. In addition to these he also described different fur, , and felt clothing.Song, 63-70.
Song Yingxing wrote that ancient rulers of early China cast inscriptions of writing onto bronze tripods since this was a much more durable method of preserving the written record than using the perishable materials found in books and scrolls.Song, 159-160. He noted that musical and announcing bells of higher quality were made of different copper alloys, while those of lesser quality were made of iron.Song, 160. He also provided weighted formulas of different metal compositions for certain bells, for example, the casting a large bell in an audience hall or pavilion that required 47,000 catty of copper, 4,000 catty of tin, 50 ounce. of gold, and 120 ounce. of silver in its composition. In the smelting process, long pits for the liquid metal flow had to be dug, having a drymold construction of lime and mortar that was dried and covered in ox fat and beeswax. Then he noted the following process of pounded earth and charcoal powder that was screened and mixed into a mud paste that would be gradually spread on the surface of the wax several inches thick.Song 162. When dried and heated so that the melted fat and wax could flow out entirely by means of apertures at the base, the bell or tripod could be cast in the vacated cavity between the core and the mold. With the individual casting process for bells and tripods, Song Yingxing also described the intricate individual casting processes for making cooking pots and pans,Song, 163. metal , metal barrels of ,Song, 165. metallic , and different metallic coins of copper or iron.Song, 165-169. He described the processes of hammer forging with the initial casting of an anvil, and noted that in the heating process of forging, coal accounted for 70% of the fuel, charcoal taking the rest at 30%. He also outlined the quench-hardening process of rapid cooling in clear water immediately after iron and steel products were forged.Song, 190. He outlined the different types of knife, axes, hoes,Song, 191. file tools, Scratch awl,Song, 192. , chisel,Song, 196. , and metal needlesSong, 196-197 that could be forged and produced. For the making of the finest swords, he said, they are coated with steel after "a hundred smeltings," but the core of the sword was still made of wrought iron; this was because a sword made entirely of steel would easily break when making hard strikes.
Song Yingxing described a 'match for ten thousand armies' bomb as follows:
The historian Needham notes that Song Yingxing must not have been much of a military man with extensive knowledge of martial matters, due to his enthusiasm for this archaic type of bomb that had been used by the Chinese since the Song dynasty in the 12th century.Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 166
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