Lu Ji
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Lu Ji | |||||||||
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Traditional Chinese: | 陸機 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese: | 陆机 | ||||||||
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Lu Ji, (261–303), courtesy name Shiheng (士衡), was a Chinese writer and literary critic from the Kingdom of Wu in south China.
He was a direct descendant of the founders of the kingdom and son of the Wu commander in chief, Lu Kang. After the kingdom was subjugated by the Western Jin in 280 Lu Ji moved to the imperial capital, Luoyang where he became a member of the inteligensia. He was made president of the imperial university and rose to prominence in the government until he was found to be involved in revolutionary plots and executed in 303.
Lu Ji wrote much lyric poetry but is better known for writing fù, a mixture of prose and poetry. He wrote the Wenfu (On Literature), a piece of literary criticism that discourses on the principles of composition.
[edit] References
This article contains Chinese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters. |
- 2005 Encyclopædia Britannica, copyrighted 1994-2005
- Li, Siyong and Wei, Fengjuan, "Li Ji". Encyclopedia of China (Chinese Literature Edition), 1st ed.