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The '''Four Great Classical Novels''', or '''Four Major Classical Novels''' ({{zh-c|c=四大名著}}) of [[Chinese literature]], are the four novels commonly counted by scholars to be the greatest and most influential in classical Chinese fiction. Extremely famous and well known to every Chinese reader in the 20th century, they are not to be confused with the [[Four Books]] of [[Confucianism]]. These books are considered to be the pinnacle of East Asia's achievement in classical novels, influencing the creation of many games and movies and other entertainment throughout the mainland China, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan.
The '''Four Great Classical Novels''', or '''Four Major Classical Novels''' ({{zh-c|c=四大名著}}) of [[Chinese literature]], are the four novels commonly counted by scholars to be the greatest and most influential in classical Chinese fiction. Well known to every Chinese reader in the 20th century, they are not to be confused with the [[Four Books]] of [[Confucianism]]. These books are considered to be the pinnacle of East Asia's achievement in classical novels, influencing the creation of many games, movies and other entertainment throughout the mainland China, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan.


In chronological order, they are:
In chronological order, they are:

Revision as of 03:22, 23 May 2008

The Four Great Classical Novels, or Four Major Classical Novels (Chinese: 四大名著) of Chinese literature, are the four novels commonly counted by scholars to be the greatest and most influential in classical Chinese fiction. Well known to every Chinese reader in the 20th century, they are not to be confused with the Four Books of Confucianism. These books are considered to be the pinnacle of East Asia's achievement in classical novels, influencing the creation of many games, movies and other entertainment throughout the mainland China, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan.

In chronological order, they are:

Some consider Jin Ping Mei (金瓶梅) (The Plum in the Golden Vase or Golden Lotus) (1610) to be a fifth classic. In the late Ming Dynasty and early Qing Dynasty, Jin Ping Mei along with the above first three novels, was classified as "Four Major Novels of Wonder" (四大奇書,四大奇书) by Feng Menglong (冯梦龙). With the advent of Dream of the Red Chamber, its position has gradually been usurped. For a long time, it has almost faded into oblivion because Chinese government banned it for its explicit description of sex.