Guqin is one of the earliest plucked string instruments of the Chinese nation and is the oldest and most vital art form in China. It is the most respected instrument in ancient China, and its cultural connotation far exceeds the scope of music. On July 1, 2005, UNESCO announced the second batch of "Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity", and China's Guqin art was among them. However, in today's world where Western learning is spreading to the East, although "high mountains and flowing water" and "qin, chess, calligraphy and painting" are well known to everyone, if you ask them in detail what "qin" is, most people are at a loss. Even fewer people know that in the land of Qi and Lu, there was once a Guqin art school that played extraordinary and brilliant music. Zhucheng Qin School is a wonderful flower that emerged in the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China after thousands of years of vicissitudes of this ancient art.