According to preliminary publications, the corpus includes 1,167 strips, in fairly good conditions, with length ranging from 21.3 to 48.5 cm. The editors in charge of curating and publishing the collection divided the material into four groups. • A manuscript version of partial content in the
Book of Odes. This is the first one published by the editor, in the first volume
Anhui daxue cang Zhanguo zhujian (yi) 安徽大學藏戰國竹簡 (—). • Circa 450 strips related to history of the
state of Chu. This group is further subdivided into two sections on the basis of writing style: a section of 300 strips, covering the bureaucratic structure of the Chu state, and a section of circa 150 strips recording historical events. • A group of philosophical texts, of circa 376 strips. This includes sayings attributed to Confucius, some of which previously known from the
Lunyu, and some of which previously unknown. There are also writings on how the noble person (君子) ought to behave, a parallel version of the Shanghai Museum manuscript
Cao Mo zhi zhen 曹沫之陳, and writings related to the text that goes by the name of its alleged authors,
Mozi and the
Zhuangzi. • Material similar or related to the
Chu Ci, in two groups of 24 and 27 strips each. The remaining material cover topics of
oneiromancy and physiognomy. == Content ==