Zhao Yingcheng

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zhao Yingcheng
Traditional Chinese: 趙映乘
Simplified Chinese: 赵映乘

Zhao Yingcheng (Hebrew name: Moshe ben Abram;[1] 16191657?) was a mandarin in China during the Ming dynasty and a Jew. He and his brother Zhao Yingdou, also a mandarin, held important government posts in the 1660s.[2][3]

Contents

[edit] Life and career

Proficient in both Hebrew and Chinese, Zhao, from the province of Chen-Si, obtained the jinshi degree in 1646. He was named director of the Ministry of Justice. Four years later he was sent to Fujian and Huguang as an official. He was remembered as an efficient administrator and excellent Confucian scholar who exterminated local bandits and founded schools.[4]

In 1642, near the end of the Ming Dynasty, Kaifeng was flooded by the Ming army with water from the Yellow River to prevent the peasant rebel Li Zicheng from taking over. After this disaster, the city was abandoned. The synagogue of the Kaifeng Jewish community (reportedly dating from 1163) was destroyed, and the Jews took refuge on the north side of the Yellow River. They took with them the scrolls, which had been saved after having been thrown into the river.

Ten years later, Zhao was detailed to restore the city. With the aid of his brother, Zhao Yingdou, he induced the Jews to recross the river and take up their old quarters. The temple was rebuilt in 1653, with the personal financial support of Zhao.[4] One complete scroll of the Law was made up out of the fragments which had been saved from the river, and other copies were made from this. A stone stele dated 1663 was afterward erected, giving the details of Zhao Yingcheng's action.

Zhao wrote an account of the saving of the scrolls and the rebuilding of the temple, Record of the Vicissitudes of the Holy Scriptures. His brother wrote Preface to the Illustrious Way, believed to be an exposition of the tenets of Judaism. Both works are now lost, although in recent years Chinese scholars have begun a search for them in the libraries of Kaifeng, Beijing, and elsewhere.[1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Michael Pollack, "The Jews of Kaifeng", p. 4
  2. ^ Li Yu, A History of Reading in Late Imperial China, 1000–1800, pp. 257–58
  3. ^ Zhao 2005
  4. ^ a b Li Yu, p. 258

[edit] Sources

[edit] Further reading

  • J. Tobar, Inscriptions Juives de K'ai-fong-fou. Shanghai, 1900
  • M. Adler, in Jewish Quarterly Review, xiii, 22–23
  • Donald Leslie, "The K’aifeng Jew Chao Ying-Ch’eng and his Family." In Studies of the Chinese Jews: Selections from Journals East and West, compiled by Hyman Kublin. New York: Paragon Book Reprint Corp., 1971
  • The Survival of the Chinese Jews: The Jewish Community of Kaifeng. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1972
  • Mandarins, Jews, and Missionaries: The Jewish Experience in the Chinese Empire. Philadelphia, 1980. Reprinted, 1983. 2nd ed., New York: 1998.

[edit] External link

This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia article "Chao Yng-Cheng", a publication now in the public domain.

Languages