Huang Zongxi
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- This is a Chinese name; the family name is Huang.
Huang Zongxi (traditional Chinese: 黃宗羲; simplified Chinese: 黄宗羲; pinyin: Huáng Zōngxī; Wade-Giles: Huang Tsunghsi, September 24, 1610–August 12, 1695), courtesy name Taichong (太冲), was the name of a Chinese political theorist, philosopher, and soldier during the latter part of the Ming dynasty into the early part the Qing.[1]
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[edit] Biography
Huang was a native of Yuyao in Zhejiang province. He was the son of Huang Zunsu, an official of the Ming court and an adherent of the Donglin Movement who died in prison after opposing the powerful eunuch Wei Chengxian.
Huang Zongxi became a licentiate in 1623 at the age of 14[2], and in the same year followed his father to Beijing, where his father held a post as a censor. The struggle between the Donglin faction and the eunuchs was reaching a climax during this period, and as a result the elder Huang was dismissed from office in 1625 and the two returned home. Soon after, Huang Zongxi was married to Ye Baolin. When Huang Zunsu was traveling in custody to Beijing in 1626, he introduced his son to Liu Zongzhou, a noted philosopher of the Wang Yangming school. Huang Zongxi then became a devoted disciple of Liu and a proponent of the Wang Yangming school.
Huang Zunsu was put to death in 1626. When a new emperor ascended the throne two years later, Huang Zongxi set off for the capital to protest the execution of his father. Even before he arrived, however, the eunuch faction was destroyed and those who died under it were bestowed with honors. Still, Huang engaged in daring acts of vengeance in the capital, gaining the respect of many. In accordance with his father's last wishes, he in 1631 devoted himself to studying Chinese history. In 1633, Huang completed the Shilu, or "Veritable Records" of the first thirteen reigns of the Ming Dynasty.
After the beginning of the Qing Dynasty and the rise to power of Ruan Dacheng, arrest warrants were issued for descendants of Donglin members, including Huang Zongxi. Liang Qichao later speculated that Huanng avoided capture by fleeing to Japan during this period, but the evidence consists of only one poem. Huang assisted Ming loyalist forces until his retirement in 1649. Thereafter, Huang devoted himself to study and lived near his native home for much of the rest of his life. He died in 1695, at the age of 86.[3]
[edit] Study
Huang was notable for being one of the first Neo-Confucians to stress the need for constitutional law. He also openly advocated the belief that ministers should be openly critical of their emperor; and that rulers held a responsibility to their country.
Huang's first work was not completed until the age of 52, and the work's fuller impact was not felt until the declining years of the Qing dynasty.
[edit] Major works
[edit] Waiting for the Dawn
Waiting for the Dawn (Mingyi daifanglu, traditional Chinese: 明夷待訪錄) was a summary of ideas about political reform that had been advanced by various scholars since the reign of Wanli (1573-1619). The political tract begins with a condemnation of selfish autocratic rule, and declares that the world should belong to the people. The third and fifth section of the work, "On Laws" and "Schools", respectively, are particularly famous. In the former, Huang declares that all laws and regulatory bodies should be an outgrowth of local needs, not imposed by leaders with a political agenda. In the latter, he advocates using the education system as a semiofficial forum for educated opinion on public affairs.[4]
In the sixth and seventh sections of the work, entitled "Selecting Good Men", Huang also lays out his ideas for reform of the Imperial examination system. In later sections, he discusses equitable distribution of landholdings, the division between men of civil and military background, fiscal reform, and the problem of Eunuch power during the Ming dynasty.[5]
[edit] Mingru Xue'an
The Mingru Xue'an (明儒學案) is a systematic survey of all of the important schools of thought that arose during the Ming Dynasty. It explored their interconnection and geographical distribution, and critically evaluated the life and teachings of important men from each school. It is usuall regarded as the first great history of Chinese philosophy.[6] The work was later lauded by Liang Qichao as a new kind of historiography.[7]
At the time of his death, Huang Zongxi left behind an uncompleted survey of the Song and Yuan dynasties.
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ Hummel, Arthur W. (1943). Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (1644-1912). Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 351-354.
- ^ All ages given here are in East Asian age reckoning.
- ^ Hummel (1943) pp. 351-353
- ^ Struve, Linn A. (1988). "Huang Zongxi in Context: A Reappraisal of His Major Writings". The Journal of Asian Studies 47 (3): 474-502. doi: .
- ^ Struve (1988) pp. 476-478
- ^ Du Lianzhe in Hummel (1943) p. 353
- ^ Struve (1988) p. 480