The
Book of Rites is a diverse compilation of texts of uncertain origin and date. Unlike the
Rites of Zhou and the
Book of Etiquette and Ceremonial, it lacks a consistent overall structure. Some sections provide definitions of ritual terminology—particularly those found in the
Book of Etiquette and Ceremonial—while others contain details concerning the life and teachings of
Confucius. Portions of the text have been traced to pre-Han works such as the
Xunzi and the
Lüshi Chunqiu, while other sections are believed to have been composed during the
Former Han period. During the reign of
Qin Shi Huang, many Confucian texts were destroyed in the 213 BCE "
Burning of the Books." However, the
Qin dynasty collapsed within a decade, and Confucian scholars who had memorised the classics or hidden written copies helped to reconstruct them during the early
Han dynasty. The
Book of Rites was said to have been fully recovered, although the
Classic of Music could not be recompiled. Only fragments of the latter survive, primarily within the
"Record of Music" (
Yueji) chapter of the
Book of Rites. Subsequent efforts were made to edit and organise the recompiled texts. According to the
Book of Sui, the scholar
Dai De revised the collection in the 1st century BCE, reducing it from 214 books to 85, known as the
Ritual Records of Dai the Elder (). His nephew,
Dai Sheng, later abridged this to 46 books, known as the
Ritual Records of Dai the Younger (). The scholar
Ma Rong subsequently added three additional books, bringing the total to 49. However, later scholarship has questioned this account, noting a lack of reliable evidence attributing these specific revisions to Dai De or Dai Sheng, although both were known Confucian scholars with expertise in ritual texts. During this period, both old-script and new-script versions of the text were in circulation, and the content was not yet standardised.
Zheng Xuan, a student of Ma Rong, produced an annotated edition of the Rites by synthesising multiple ritual traditions. His compilation of 49 books became the authoritative version, and it remains the standard edition today. Zheng Xuan's annotated version later formed the basis for the
Right Meaning of the Ritual Records (), the imperially sanctioned text and commentary on the
Book of Rites, established in 653 CE. In 1993, a copy of the
"Black Robes" chapter was discovered in Tomb 1 of the
Guodian tombs in
Jingmen,
Hubei province. As the tomb was sealed around 300 BCE, the discovery reignited scholarly debate regarding the dating of other chapters of the
Liji, particularly their possible origins in the Warring States period. ==Li==