Mingwenhai 明文海 is an anthology of Ming-period 明 (1368-1644) prose and semi-prose writings compiled by the famous philosopher Huang Zongxi 黃宗羲 (1610-1695). Of the 482 juan listed in the contents, the last two are missing. The vast collection nonetheless includes about 4,300 texts written by nearly 1,000 persons. The writings are arranged according to 28 literary genres (and some sub-genres).
Huang intended to preserve significant pieces of literature that could provide insights into the politics, economy, culture, and military affairs of the Ming dynasty, with the focus of Huang's thoughts on its commemoration. He chose to follow the paradigms of anthologies such as Wenxuan 文選, Tangwencui 唐文粹, Songwenjian 宋文鑒, and Yuanwenlei 元文類, aiming to undertake a similar project for the Ming period. He relied solely on sources within his private library and completed a draft of 217 juan in 1675, after seven years of work, called Mingwen'an 明文案. This work included not only original texts but also Huang's comments and reviews, making it comparable to Qian Qianyi's 錢謙益 (1582-1664) Lichao shiji 列朝詩集.
The compilers of the imperial series Siku quanshu 四庫全書 revised this draft, simplified the categories and eliminated secondary text, with the argument that much of the draft was not Huang’s genuine work, but that of his son Huang Baijia 黃百家 (1643-1709). Apart from the Siku quanshu edition, only a few manuscripts were circulating, one of which was owned by the Hanfen Library 涵芬樓, and one by the Zhejiang Library 浙江圖書館.
The anthology is critical because it preserves texts not found in other collections, like Sang Yue's 桑悅 (1447-1513) rhapsodies Beidu 北都 and Nandu 南都, or Zhu Yizun's 朱彝尊 (1629-1709) Rixia jiuwen 日下舊聞.
1-46 | 賦 fu | Rhapsodies |
47-65 | 奏疏 zoushu | Memorials to the throne |
66 | 詔表 zhaobiao | Imperial edicts |
67-73 | 碑 bei | Epitaphs |
74-83 | 議 yi | Debates |
84-100 | 論 lun | Treatises |
101-109 | 說 shuo | Explanations |
110-118 | 辯 bian | Discourses |
119-121 | 考 kao | Investigations |
122 | 頌 song | Eulogies |
123 | 贊 zan | Encomia |
124 | 銘 ming | Inscriptions |
125 | 箴 zhen | Admonitions |
126 | 戒 jie | Instructions |
127-130 | 解 jie | Analyses |
131 | 原 yuan | Edifications |
132 | 述 shu | Descriptions |
133 | 讀 du | Readings |
134-138 | 問答 wenda | Answers to questions |
139-140 | 文 wen | Writings |
141-146 | 諸體文 zhutiwen | Texts of various genres |
147-209 | 書 shu | Letters |
210-326 | 序 xu | Prefaces and introductions |
327-386 | 記 ji | Notes |
387-428 | 傳 zhuan | Biographies |
429-472 | 墓文 muwen | Grave memorials |
473-478 | 哀文 aiwen | Laments |
479-480 | 稗 bai | Petty notes |